|
1.
(I) The world is growing more and more
environmentally conscious. (II) Or else, the
supply of raw materials would attract attention.
(III) This is producing some interesting
developments. (IV) Some car manufacturers, for
example, are now beginning to give
priority to recycling techniques. (V) It is this,
rather than improved performance, that is
receiving attention in the advertisement.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP b7
2.
(I) The film industry is going through bad times.
(II) This is partly because studio heads
are out-of-touch with their audiences. (III)
Television offers no serious competition
against the film industry. (IV) It is apparent that
they don't appreciate that adult audiences
want movies they can talk about. (V) The audience
want to be taken to places they've
never been to, as well.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP c7
3.
(I) Banking services in Hungary are expected to
improve dramatically this year. (II) The
installation of a computerized interbank settlement
system will greatly aid this. (III)
Typical banking transactions on the new network will
take less than two minutes. (IV)
Therefore, no scheme for keeping down inflation has
been forthcoming. (V) Moreover
the capacity of the services will increase
threefold.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP d7
4.
(I) The neuromuscular disorder known as ALS strikes
5.000
Americans each year. (II) The ailment involves the
progressive death of motor neurons. (III) Some
families are even
more susceptible to the other condition. (IV) As the
condition advances, sufferers lose
the ability to speak, to swallow and finally to
breath. (V) Only a few of them survive more than
five years.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP c7
5.
(I) Today the West is in the grip of a second
industrial revolution. (II) The first caused a
shift from agriculture to industry. (III) So, one
solution to the problem of unemployment became
apparent. (IV) The new revolution is shifting the
economy away from conventional
manufacturing industries to those based upon
information, services and new
technologies. (V) Naturally one can't help wondering
whether there'll be a third industrial
revolution in the future.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP c7
6.
(I) Obviously oil imports haven't put a great strain
on the national budget. (II) Inflation has become
one of the country's most essential economic
problems. (III) This is because it
generates instability in the economy. (IV) This in
turn reduces capital investment which
harms productivity and leads to a decline in living
standards. (V) So there is a chain
process which is hard to break.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP a7
7.
(I) Before Galileo, it was believed that a lifeless
body would not move by itself. (II) It was further
believed that such a body, once in motion would
gradually come to rest. (III)
Experimental science was not even permitted during
the Middle Ages. (IV) But Galileo
and Newton proceed according to the laws of physics.
(V) And that once they are set in
motion they will go on indefinitely.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP c7
8.
(I) The acts of a single man are as a rule
insignificant nowadays. (II) But the acts of
groups are more significant than they used to be.
(III) If one man refuses to work, that is
his own affair. (IV) After all, everyone stops
working when he retires. (V) But if there is a
strike in a vital industry the whole community
suffers.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP d7
9.
(I) In fact London dates back to Roman times. (II)
Greater London, with its nine million
population, includes the City and the County London.
(III) It includes the outer
suburbs and much land that looks more urban than
rural, as well. (IV) There are no definite
boundaries, but it covers an area of some twenty
miles radius from Oxford Circus. (V) It
is surrounded by a "green belt" and there it is
forbidden to build.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP a7
10. (I) A thick layer of snow on a steep slope is
always liable to avalanche. (II) A lot of
avalanches occur in the Breos. (III) A very small
disturbance may set it in motion. (IV) The
vibrations caused by a passing train are enough. (V)
Once in motion it gains in speed
and crushes everything in its path.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP b7
1.
(I) At the end of
1974,
the prospects of the country were far from rosy.
(II) To begin with, the rate of inflation was
steadily going up. (III) It only dropped temporarily
in May and
June. (IV) So were the unemployment figures. (V) And
the cold winter served to
aggravate all the problems.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP e7
2.
(I) It is the accuracy of laser surgery that makes
it so effective. (II) The laser beam can
also remove bone that makes it invaluable in ear
surgery. (III) This accuracy can be
increased by sending the beam along fibers of glass
finer than a human hair. (IV) These
can carry a beam around corners and direct it
precisely at a tiny area. (V) Therefore, there is
virtually
no risk of damaging healthy cells.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP b7
3.
(I) Correct tyre pressure is more vital than many
people realize. (II) The right
pressure opens up the tread so its edges grip the
road. (III) In wet weather this is
obviously of prime significance. (IV) The spare tyre
should also be checked occasionally
to make sure it is fit for use. (V) But even when
the weather is dry, tyre pressure should
be checked and adjusted regularly.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)W
E)V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP d7
4.
(I) Modern theory envisages that the Sun and Solar
System evolved from a primitive
nebula.
(II) About 4 billion years ago, for reasons unknown,
this nebula started to
contract. (III) In the outer regions temperatures
remained even lower. (IV) The rotation
then speeded up, causing the cloud to flatten into a
disk. (V) In the densest part of this
disk a proto-sun formed.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP c7
5.
(I) Written communication is the basis of much
communication in the business world. (II)Letter
writing, however, has gone into a decline since the
invention of the telephone.
(III) It includes letters, reports, memoranda and
telex messages. (IV) It has the
disadvantage of being slower than oral
communication. (V) However it has the great
advantage of providing a record of transactions so
that disagreements can be avoided
and accuracy checked.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP b7
6.
(I) Most children, from time to time, show
aggressive tendencies. (II) This is entirely
normal, and should be regarded as so. (III) Indeed,
children should be encouraged to
express their aggression fully through creative
activities and exploration. (IV) For this, a
safe, suitable background must be provided. (V) In
fact, more accidents occur indoors
than they do outdoors.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP e7
7.
(I) There are several reasons why traditional
medicine distrusts the practitioners of
alternative medicine. (II) Herbalists think they can
cure a wide range of conditions with
plant substances alone. (III) These people like to
look beyond the immediate symptoms
to the body's total state. (IV) They aim to restore
health by helping the body to heal itself.
(V) Their skill lies in knowing which plants are
beneficial in which circumstances.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP a7
8.
(I) In recent years notable results have been
achieved in the field of organ
transplants. (II) Gradually we are learning more
about the chemistry of memory. (III) This
also concerns the genes. (IV) Previously, tissues
could not be transplanted. (V) Now by
using genetically identical twin tissues, surgeons
are able to do successful organ
transplants.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP b7
9.
(I) It is true that the Arabs carefully studied
Greek thought, and translated into Arabic
many outstanding Greek writings on medicine,
science, and philosophy. (II) Europe, even
when at war with them, eagerly learned from their
scholars. (III) Many European students
attended Arab universities in Spain and returned
home as admirers of Arab learning. (IV)
Actually, the Western impact on the Arab world has
been enormous. (V) Therefore, medieval
Europe was greatly indebted to the Arabs.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP d7
10.
(I) Financially,
1975
was a difficult year for the airline industry, with
only insufficient
increases in traffic. (II) In the U.S. the condition
was particularly bad. (III) There, the
airlines put most of the blame on the continuing
rise in fuel prices. (IV) The economic
recession combined with inflation lowered demand for
railways. (V) In Europe, however,
air traffic continued to increase but at a slower
rate than in recent years.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP d7
1.
(I) Men of science and philosophers from very early
times, have attempted to define life. (II) They even
tried to prove that all living things posses souls.
(III) Nearly all living things
grow during some part of their life. (IV) Aristotle,
for instance, who may be looked upon
as the "father of biological research," tried hard
to establish the presence of souls in
plants. (V) However for many centuries it was not
realized that to define life is practically
impossible.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP c7
2. (I)
In the contemporary world, political crime poses
cruel political and moral problems. (II) These
problems are particularly acute in more democratic
societies. (III) At the other end
of the political spectrum, a totalitarian regime is
almost immune to terrorism. (IV) For
here the security apparatus of the state makes it
almost impossible for terrorist groups
even to exist. (V) Therefore, among the reasons of
terrorism can be mentioned bad
economy.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP e7
3.
(I) Throughout history, the Mediterranean has served
as beneficial commercial route
between the East and the West. (II) Those who visit
the Mediterranean are invariably
impressed with its unity. (III) Everywhere it is the
same, (IV) For the shades of difference
here is less important than the resemblances. (V)
Nevertheless, this unity is the result of
aggressive contrast: sea and mountain, sea and
desert.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP a7
4.
(I) Chemistry is the science of the elements and
their compounds. (II) It is concerned with the laws
of their combination and behavior under various
circumstances. (III) This term is
generally restricted to mean the use in war or
poisonous gases. (IV) It had its roots in
alchemy and has gradually developed into a science
of vast magnitude and importance.
(V) Its major fields are organic chemistry,
inorganic chemistry, and physical chemistry.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP c7
5.
(I) Racism is the doctrine that one race is
inherently superior or inferior to others. (II) It
has no connection whatever with the study of race as
a concept. (III) Furthermore, it is not
concerned with the investigation of racial
discrepancies which is a science practiced by the
physical anthropologists. (IV) Racism is simply a
vulgar superstition believed in by the
ignorant of the mentally unbalanced. (V) Today in
the world anti-Semitism is not so
widespread as it used to in the past.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP e7
6.
(I) The balance of payments has lately been a
serious problem particularly in Eastern
Europe. (II) The late
1950s
and the early
1960s
saw a decline in British competitiveness.
(III) As a result, the British share in world
exports of manufacturers fell steadily. (IV) On
the other hand, there was a rapid increase in
imports of manufactured goods. (V)
As a result, the balance of payments deteriorated,
and the country was heading
towards a major economic crisis.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP a7
7.
(I) In the early 1900s, a variety of film
production companies appeared in the United States
and entered into severe competition with each other.
(II) it was in the late
1920s,
however, that the golden era of Hollywood really
began. (III) Many companies then created stars still
popular and famous today. (IV) Financial
difficulties became even more pressing
during the depression years. (V) Among these, the
best known and most famous of
all was, of course, Charles Chaplin.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP d7
8.
(I) Delecroix's paintings fall into three
distinct groups. (II) One must also be reminded
that he was devoted to music, and often spoke of his
palette as though it were a scale on
which he composed harmonies. (III) There are his
portraits, noteworthy for their
astonishing psychological perception. (IV) Then
there are his historical pieces, large
ambitious subjects drawn from the romantic
literature for which he had so much
sympathy. (V) Lastly there are a few landscapes, of
pure lyrical content.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP b7
9.
(I) On June
1977
the first free parliamentary elections for
41
years were held in Spain. (II) This was a decisive
step on the road from dictatorship to democracy, and
in July the new
two-chamber parliament replaced the old "Cortes" of
General Franco. (III) In fact, the
most vital issue for the future of Spain was the
separatist Basque terrorism in the
north of the country. (IV) The first duty of the new
government and parliament was the
drawing up of a new democratic constitution. (V)
Also, in the meantime, a wide range of
political and economic reforms were introduced, end
in the
1980s
Spain emerged as a
major economic power in Europe.
A) I
B)II
C )III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP c7
10.
(I) While the earliest European immigrants to
America were farmers, many city dwellers came to the
new land as well. (II) These new comers were
attracted to the bustling urban centers. (III) As a
result, American cities expanded enormously. (IV)
The history of the
United States is filled with accounts of people who
came from all over the world to settle
here. (V) New York, for instance, which had a
population of only sixty thousand in
1600,
grew to city of more than one million people in
1860.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP d7
1.
(I) As we live and grow, we learn the culture of
the society in which we live. (II)
Sociologists tell us that the most important
elements of culture that we should learn are
values, norms and roles. (III) While values are
rather general, norms are quite specific.
(IV) A collection of the norms connected with a
particular position or activity in a society
is called a role. (V) History shows us that
disagreements over vital political issues always
create violent conflict within a society.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP e7
2.
(I) Getting through a day without being exposed to
the media would be unthinkable. (II)
Both directly and indirectly the media have a
profound effect on our everyday lives. (III) What
we eat, that we buy, what we do, even what we think
is affected by the media. (IV) Yet,
the question is whether what the media provides us
with, can always be good and
revealing. (V) According to one study,
64%
of the American public turns on television for
most of its news.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP e7
3.
(I) Writing in the
1930s, J. M.
Keynes was mainly concerned with unemployment. (II)
According to him, the question was why it persisted.
(III) Since
1945,
the twin objectives of economic growth and full
employment have been the primary concern of
developed countries
throughout the world. (IV) His own answer to this
was that employment was determined
by the level of output and this was determined by
demand. (V) Thus, the level of
employment could be regulated by managing the level
of demand.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP c7
4.
(I) From the fourteenth century onwards,
particularly in Italy scholars, poets, and artists
began to take a new interest in learning. (II) In
almost all the city-states of Northern Italy
the power had been seized by certain great families.
(III) Instead of studying chiefly
technology and the writings of the medieval
philosophers, they now turned to the
philosophers and poets of classical antiquity and
began to study them intensively. (IV)
The minds of men were now set free and they began to
think as they pleased. (V) This
new learning soon spread to the rest of Europe and
the "Renaissance" was well under
way.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP b7
5.
(I) By about
3500
B.C., there had developed in Egypt and Mesopotamia a
highly advanced social and economic life. (II)
Copper and bronze were being used though on a
limited scale, and trading contacts with other
countries had been established. (III) Most
archaeologists think that civilization first
developed in the Middle East. (IV)
Many of these contacts were with Syria, which, lying
between Egypt and Mesopotamia,
had participated at an early date in the general
advance of material and cultural
development. (V) Furthermore, Syria was endowed with
a number of resources that were
lacking in Egypt and Mesopotamia.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP c7
6. (I) In
1965
when Mrs. Indra Gandhi became the prime minister of
India, she faced serious
political problems in the country. (II) For example,
she followed a pro-Soviet foreign
policy and hence, did not react against the Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan. (III) In the first
place, she had to consolidate her authority in the
Congress Party against the opposition
from the party's old guard. (IV) Moreover she had to
deal with the terrorist activities in various
parts of the country. (V) Nevertheless, she took
courageous steps in her rue and won a
landslide election victory in
1971.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP b7
7. (I) To understand the British system of
government, it is important to appreciate the
significance of the party system. (II) Naturally,
parties exist to form governments, and in
Britain the path to this goal lies in the House of
Commons, for the party which obtains a
majority of seats has the right to form the
government. (III) Since the 17th century, two
parties have usually been predominant in British
politics. (IV) Until the
1920s
these were
the Tories (the Conservatives) and the Whigs (the
Liberals), and since the
1930s
the
Conservatives and the Labor. (V) Up to now many
reforms have been introduced to improve
the local election system.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP e7
8. (I) In October
1973
the Arab oil-producing states took the decision to
restrict oil supplies
to the West and raised oil prices. (II) The
limitation of supplies was initiated as a short-
run weapon in the Arab-Israeli conflict. (III)
Indeed, it revealed a potential for obtaining
higher prices, which had not previously been
exploited by the oil countries. (IV) Most
economics argue that the exploitation of North Sea
oil has been a mixed blessing for
Britain. (V) Being aware of this potential, the
international oil cartel OPEC raised the price
for a barrel of crude oil from
1.75
US dollars in September
1973
to
7.00
US dollars in
January
1974.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP d7
9. (I) Generally, the term "abstract art" is used to
describe new movements and techniques
in plastic arts in the 20th century. (II) The
underlying principle of this art is that it is not
the subject at all but form and color which really
possess aesthetic value. (III) Obviously,
we cannot disregard the fact that vitality of art
thought history is closely bound up with
some form of religion. (IV) Most art historians
claim that the impressionist, especially
Cezanne, can be considered to be the pioneers of
this art. (V) Also, there are some who
strongly argue that the origins of abstract art are
to be sought in the designs of primitive
people as well as folk art.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP c7
10. (I) Throughout the Middle Ages Christian Europe
launched many allied expeditions
against the Muslim rule in Spain to bring it to an
end. (II) Historically the ancient palace of
the Muslim rulers at Granada in Spain is named
"Alhambra". (III) Originally, it was
designed, built, and developed into an architectural
masterpiece in the 13th and 14th
centuries. (IV) Unfortunately, the stylistic
uniformity of the palace was spoiled when in
the 16th century Charles V turned part of it into a
modern residence. (V) But, the
most beautiful parts of the interior, covering the
Court of Alberca and the Court of Lions,
have survived and preserve their original charm.
A)I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP a7
1
(I) It was Engels
in 1844
who first referred to the Industrial revolution in
Britain. (II) According to him, the transformation
of Britain from a merely agricultural country into a
predominantly industrial one was of a revolutionary
nature. (III) In the 19th century Britain colonized
most of Africa and South East Asia. (IV) In fact,
the Industrial Revolution had begun in the late
eighteenth century with the mechanization of the
textile industry. (V) This was soon followed by
major technological and other industrial
developments which made
Britain the most prosperous country in the world.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D) IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP c7
2.
(I) For about
40
years, relations have been frozen between the United
States and Cuba. (II) This is mainly owing to the
glaring differences between the regimes of the two
countries. (III) Many, on both sides, have ceased to
hope for an improvement in the
relations. (IV) More surprisingly, the recent papal
trip to the island has had an effect in
Washington, too. (V) Mr. Castro will not ease his
grip until he dies; nor will the policy
makers in Washington be ready to lift American
embargo against trade with Cuba.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP d7
3.
(I) Agricultural teaching in West African schools
invariably meets with apathy. (II) Even
so, agricultural education is a necessity, but it
should be directed towards the farmer
himself. (III) He needs instruction in new
techniques. (IV) The greater part of these students
acquire a lifelong distaste for all forms of
activity. (V) He needs information on new
and profitable cash crops and potential local
markets, as well.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP d7
4.
(I) Some historians claim that cannibalism did not
exist before
1492.
(II) They would
argue that it was invented by Columbus. (III) Of
course, this is not to deny that
cannibalism was unknown in the ancient world. (IV)
It is apparent to have always existed, or to have
been said to exist, usually in "other" places. (V)
Thus, it is true that the word
"cannibal" is a corruption of the Amerindian word
"Carib", which means "bold" or
"fierce".
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP e7
5. (I)
As forests are cut down, many wild animals are
finding it harder to survive. (II) Unfortunately the
range of the leopard, for example, is but a fraction
of what it formerly was. (III) They are, for example
no longer to be found in Europe proper. (IV)
Fortunately, there are
instances of such endangered species managing to
reestablish themselves. (V) In the
Caucasus and northern Iran there are still some, but
their numbers are decreasing
rapidly.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP d7
6.
(I) They hadn't expected to see rolling hills dotted
by family farms with herds of cattle
grazing around. (II) Richardson Country is in the
south-eastern corner of Nebraska,
abutting Kansas and Missouri and washed by the
Missouri River. (III) It is the heart of the
heartland, the American mythologized, in
1943,
by Oscar Hammersteint in the lyrics of
"Oklahoma"
(IV) But, today, this part of the prairie America
continues to own very
little of its pastoral and traditional charm. (IV)
Unfortunately, industrialization and
reckless urbanization have destroyed much of it and
turned the place into a wasteland.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP a7
7.
(I) As recently as the
1980s,
poverty rates among the elderly in Britain were more
than
double those of the population at large. (II) Many
specialists and policy makers contend that
the problems of the retirement system have often
been exaggerated. (III) A lot of old people were
largely dependent on the charity of their children
and on local assistance programs. (IV) But, by
1995
most of these people had improved their living
conditions. (V) This was partly owing to the fact
that the country had become more prosperous in
general.
A)
I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP b7
8.
(I) The Morley Gallery has once again caught the
attention of the public. (II) Its exhibition
program is richly varied and focuses on the less
well-known painters (III) In the current
exhibition, some of the paintings of Joseph Hayward
a promising young painter, are on
show. (IV) The Gallery is situated on the outskirts
of London, but within easy reach of the
metro. (V) Examples of his early work, such as a
large watercolor of a garden, are also
included.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP d7
9.
(I) A camera is now being developed that scans the
electromagnetic radiation emitted by the human body.
(II) The police, after all, never do show any
passion for technological
innovations. (III) It may prove to be a great asset
in crime detection as hidden objects
-
which distort that radiation
-
show up as cold sports. (IV) It can defect weapons
and
drugs hidden beneath layers of clothing. (V)
Furthermore, it has apparently dangerous side
effects.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP b7
10.
(I) The role of the parents in child development is
of great significance. (II) Once a child
starts school he finds himself in a totally
different ambiance. (III) Parents are
responsible for the physical needs of their children
and for protecting them. (IV) They are
also their first teachers, and perhaps their most
essential teachers. (V) Good parents
provide their children with the emotional security
and the intellectual stimulation that are
essential for a happy and successful life.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP b7
59.
(I) The simple word "art" is generally associated
with plastic or visual arts. (II) Properly
speaking, however, it should also contain the arts
of literature and music. (III) There are
certain characteristics common to all the arts. (IV)
There are at least a dozen recent
definitions of beauty. (V) Foremost among them is
the artist's desire to please.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP d7
60.
(I) The iron blast furnace is an efficient device
for producing large quantities of molten
iron. (II) Even so, the blast furnace uses its fuel
efficiently. (III) One major advantage of
this type of furnace is its exceptional reliability.
(IV) The other important advantage is its
high rate of iron production. (V) Its only
disadvantage is its huge size which makes it.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP b7
61.
(I) Knowledge of statistics is now an important part
of our normal daily living. (II)
There are many reasons for this. (III) The main
reason, however, is that, owing to
technological and socioeconomic developments, today
statistics is being widely used.
(IV) There is hardly a newspaper, for example, that
does not make use of statistical data.
(V) Therefore, training in statistics, in fact,
training in the scientific method.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP e7
62.
(I) People interested in European affairs have
lately been faced with a series of
unprecedented and startling events in Europe. (II)
Yet, even when there were clear signs
of impending change, we couldn’t see these events
coming. (III) However, the
transitions in Eastern Europe face greater troubles
than those that have taken place
elsewhere. (IV) Every time, we have played down
their significance and counseled
caution in assessing their importance. (V) When
called upon to forecast, we have
repeatedly opted for optimism.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP b7
63.
(I) It may not be difficult to define what living
things are, since the average living thing is so
obviously alive. (II) Men of science of
philosophers, from very early times, have been
puzzled about the structure of the universe. (III)
In fact, however, it is really very
difficulty to make an accurate scientific
definition. (IV) All that can be said is that living
thins possess certain characteristics in common. (V)
It is these that provide the power
which results in the phenomenon of what is called
life.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP b7
64.
(I) Fears of one kind or another are nearly
universal in early childhood. (II) Yet,
psychologists disagree about the methods used in
childcare. (III) Experimental studies
have shown that their highest incidence is at around
three years of age. (IV) Fear is, of
course, a normal response to real danger. (V)
Nevertheless, the little child can be as
intensively afraid of imaginary danger as of real
danger.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP b7
64.
(I) There are few more infuriating situations for
the motorist than to be stuck behind a
lorry. (II) Especially when grinding its way up a
steep hill and completely blocking the
way ahead. (III) An anti-lorry sentiment, though
understandable, is foolish. (IV) The
annoyance is thus engendered. (V) Because lorries
are generally known as to be the real
cause of traffic jams.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP c7
65.
(I) We see this economic process at work most
clearly in the United States. (II) So far
as women and work is concerned, the trend there has
been decidedly retrograde in
recent years. (III) The proportion of women taking
higher education has dropped
noticeably since the second world war. (IV) In this
case American women are bound to
be trained for ill-paid jobs below their real
ability. (V) This is simply because the average
earning of women are lower than those of Negroes.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP e7
66.
(I) Every individual looks at the other members
of the group. (II) If they do not act, perhaps, he
or she will not act. (III) The individual's inaction
is not an outcome of indifference.
(IV) Yet no individual in a group can act
differently. (V) The theory is that if he or she
were alone, the person would probably take action.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP d7
67.
(I) It was thought that once everyone could read the
printed word, they would keep
themselves property informed of what was going on
around them. (II) True enough, Jan
Gutenberg soon after invented the printing machine
and people could then, afford to buy
books. (III) Nevertheless, events have by no means
justified this optimism. (IV) It turned out to
be that people lost their interest in reading. (V)
Thus, paving the way for their unawareness.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP b7
68.
(I) Educators vary in their opinions on the
ultimate purpose of education. (II) Some
think children of the same or similar intelligence
can be taught together with the same
method. (III) One view is shared by those who
suppose that the aim of education is
indoctrination. (IV) The other is held by those who
believe in pure education. (V)
According to liberal thinkers, education serves to
cultivate intellect without directly
influencing the mind.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP b7
69.
(I) The current age is full of sudden catastrophes.
(II) People fear the hurricane
and the earthquake. (III) Yet environmental
pollution is more real danger. (IV)
Chemicals, for example, must be purified to make the
world safe. (V) Even our
hearing is slowly being damaged by the level of
noise we have to suffer.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP d7
53.
(I) The collapse of the economies of southeast Asia
in the early years of the decade was
later succeeded by that of Korea, the classic tiger
economy. (II) What happens next in a
region that is now strewn with the wrecks of
so-called economic miracles? (III) This
leaves Europe and United States as important mass
markets. (IV) The assumption that
recession will spread in the region owing to capital
flight and belt-tightening is most
plausible. (V) This will deepen as foreign investors
increasingly reduce their profile in
southeast Asia.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP c7
54.
(I) The first clear fact about the mass media system
is that it is not controlled by
corporations: it is made up of them. (II) Many large
corporations are active in the Third
World and in the arms trade. (III) Just as
corporations do not control the car industry but
the car industry itself is corporations, so the
media consists of large corporations, all
in the business of maximizing profits. (IV)
Furthermore, media corporations are not simply
businesses; they are also owned by even larger
parent corporations. (V) It is these parent
corporations which influence and formulate the media
policies and practices.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP b7
55.
(I) Once, when people dreamt, they dreamt of
America: of its high wages, comforts, huge
cars and high technology. (II) "If only we could
live there or make our country like it,"
millions said to themselves. (III) Yet, no more.
(IV) Today, only the desperately poor, the
deluded or the oppressed wish to emigrate to America
or build their countries in its
image. (V) In conclusion, the rate of demographic
growth in America has shown a downward
trend in recent decades.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP e7
56.
(I) The telephone, in fact, has come a long distance
since Alexander Graham Bell invented
the first crude transmitter in
1876.
(II) Today we can place calls from automobiles,
ships
at sea and planes in the air. (III) Using the phone
system, we can fax documents around
the world. (IV) Most local telephone markets are
still monopolized by one company, but
here, too, competition is growing. (V) In a little
while we will be able to dial up images of
computerized data.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP d7
57.
(I) An international team of researchers has
finished a study of the spread of HIV in
Africa. (II) Safe sex education must to be targeted
at women and men in countries such
as Kenya and Zambia. (III) The consequences
demonstrate that teenage women and girls in Africa
are upto six times as likely to be infected with HIV
as males of the same age. (IV) Their findings
also suggest that the AIDS epidemic in Central and
East Africa is being caused by older
men infecting young girls, who then pass the virus
onto their children. (V) In the worst-
affected regions, up to half of all pregnant women
are now infected with HIV, and
40
percent of them are teenage girls who have had sex
with men aged
35
and over.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP b7
58.
(I) It must be stated at the outset that it is the
successful farmers with the best quality
land who have usually benefited from all the
government support. (II) Conventionally the
farmers on the Malwa plateaus in Central India
cultivated a large number of unirrigated
wheat
varieties. (III) With the introduction to this
region in the late sixties of electricity,
and the technology for digging deep wells, they
were induced to change to irrigated
farming. (IV) Furthermore, to develop high- yielding
varieties of wheat appropriate for
Irrigated farming, the government set up a wheat,
research center in the area. (V) This
was then backed up with the organization of special
training courses for farmers.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP a7
53.
(I)
Today
the worst
problem
facing the government of South Africa is
unemployment. (II)
This now affects a third of the population and is
rising rapidly. (III) In fact, the end of
South Africa's isolation from the world meant that
companies had cut jobs to be
competitive. (IV) Furthermore, in order to meet the
government's tight deficit targets, there
are no cuts being made in the number of the
public-service staff, which makes
unemployment even worse. (V) In the economic sector,
the condition is even more
hopeful, for there has been a wave of reforms and
mergers among banks and insurance
companies.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP e7
54.
(I) For governments and institutions, disaster
preparedness is of crucial importance. (II)
This is particularly so in countries where the risk
of disaster is real. (III) As disaster
preparedness is a multi-sectoral activity, the
functions and respective responsibilities of
each sector must be clearly defined. (IV) In fact,
few types of natural disaster can be
predicted accurately. (V) Moreover, a precise
division of labor among institutions and
agencies, and detailed pre-disaster planning will
reduce enormously the adverse effects
of a disaster.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP d7
55.
(I) In Brazil, as in much of Latin America, oil in
particular has a long been a political
symbol. (II) This has been represented by the
countries federal oil company Petrobras.
(III) Therefore, mismanagement and subsidized
pricing paralyzed the system with
dept. (IV) When founded in
1952,
it was regarded as an icon of emancipation from
foreign
economic domination. (V) But, today the Brazilian
government has taken serious steps to
stop, though privatization, Petrobras'a oil
monopoly.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP c7
56.
(I) Fish farming, which is practiced in many
countries has developed into an industry in
current years. (II) This has made scientific
research into fish biology of crucial importance.
(III) Therefore, advances in disease control and in
fish nutrition are likely to be impressive in
the years ahead. (IV) Fish farming has succeeded
only where it can compete with other
forms of food production in terms of costs. (V)
Furthermore, for most of fish species,
genetic improvements through breeding have already
been achieved to make the
industry profitable.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP d7
57.
(I) Heat stroke happens under extremely hot and
moist conditions. (II) In either case, one
should send urgently for medical help. (III) This is
because the evaporation of sweat cannot
take place in an atmosphere already saturated with
moisture. (IV) The patient becomes
burning hot with a red dry skin and a fast, forceful
pulse. (V) He may suddenly collapse
and go into coma.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU
CEVAP b7
58.
(I) Archeological evidence has shown that the
earliest libraries were built by the
Sumerians. (II) All libraries are classified to
facilitate reference, and the favorite system is
the Dewey Decimal System, that divides the entire
field of knowledge into ten main
classes. (III) These are General Works, Philosophy,
Religion, Sociology, Phonology,
Natural Science, Useful Arts and Applied Science,
Fine Arts, Literature and History. (IV)
Each class is again subdivided into ten main
divisions. (V) Then, each
division is marked by decimals within itself.
A) I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E) V
>> DOĞRU CEVAP a7 |