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GRE Sample Verbal Test Answered with Explanations
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Sentence Completion
1. Unlike
birds that simply spread viruses from an animal to another animal, pigs are the
"----vessel"
where
viruses swap genes and
become----, deadly germs.
(A) comprehensive.. small
(B) complicated.. general
(C) frustrated.. important
(D) mixing.. new
(E) lethal.. big
The word
"unlike" suggests that pigs do not simply spread viruses from an animal to
another animal. Rather, inside pigs, viruses swap genes. Choice D really makes
sense. A place where viruses swap genes is a "mixing vessel", and thus generate
"new" germs.
2. Ancient cities
were----destroyed, but archeologists have found sufficient information to
demonstrate an occasionally----but generally complete picture in Tan Era.
(A) mostly.. fragmentary
(B) obviously.. necessary
(C) unwittingly.. whole
(D) partially.. famous
(E) fully.. necessary
The first missing word
describes how ancient cities were destroyed. The phrase "sufficient information"
indicates that not all destroyed, and the word "but" indicates that the cities
were destroyed in a way that would not lead you to find sufficient information.
The second missing word describes a picture in Tan Era. The word "but" suggests
that the word that fills the second blank must contrast with the idea of full.
Therefore, the best answer is A, which describes the ancient cities as mostly
destroyed.
3. Since the primary
criterion to evaluate a company is its current performance, analysts ------ to
consider its previous credit.
(A) refused
(B) wished
(C) planned
(D) extended
(E) caused
The word "since"
indicates a cause-effect relation between the first part of sentence and the
second part. Therefore, the word that fills the blank should be "not" to
consider its previous credit. Choice A, which clearly states redundancy
(refused), is the best answer.
4. According to
Maslow's theory of need hierarchy, material is
the ---- demand of human beings, in that it provides the founding floor from
which the other demands are generated.
(A) essential
(B) basic
(C) final
(D) cheap
(E) emotional
The phrase "in that"
suggests that the cause before "in that" should be similar in meaning to that
after "in that". Thus, the word that fills in the blank must be a synonym to
"founding". B is the best answer. The word "basic" means the same as "founding".
5. To be a true leader,
a manager must not be too----: any effective leader depends on the ability of
other people to----with each other.
(A) popular.. agree
(B) adventurous ..communicate
(C) independent.. cooperate
(D) self-confident.. argue
(E) pragmatic.. disagree
The first missing word
describes a characteristic that a manager with leadership ability (a leader) can
have, but cannot have in excess. The second missing word indicates what
followers must be able to do with each other if the leader is to be effective.
The colon (:) indicates that the second part of the sentence explains or
amplifies what is said in the first part. Therefore, whatever characteristic the
leader has must enable others to do with each other. C is the best answer. If a
manager were too "independent", it would be difficult for the leader's followers
to "cooperate" with each other.
6. It is not surprising
that superior service can generate competitive advantage for a company, but the
effort taken to improve service can often be -----------.
(A) difficult
(B) expected
(C) diversified
(D) unpredictable
(E) promising
The missing word
describes how the effort would be to improve service and the word "but" suggests
that the word fills the blank must contrast with the idea of "not surprising".
Therefore, D is the best answer.
GRE Reading
Comprehension Answered with Explanation
The cutting-edge science
is ringing alarm bells. Avian flu virus picked up by pigs can swap genetic
materials with another flu virus already in the pig and become a new, hitherto
unknown flu virus for which no person, no animal has preexisting immunity. The
kind of virus causes a pandemic because it spreads from human to human.
If you took a peek into
history, it turns out that previous influenza pandemics have similar scenarios.
The greatest influenza pandemic in 1918 caused more than 20 million deaths of
soldiers stationed in France. The last influenza pandemic was in 1968, known as
the Hong Kong flu (H3N2). Thousands of deaths and millions were infected
worldwide.
The other examples are
the Nipah virus and Japanese Encephalitis virus, which find pigs to be good
hosts. With JE, the virus circulates in the blood of infected pigs. When
infected pigs are bitten by Culex mosquitoes, the virus replicates in the
mosquito's gut. The next time the mosquito bites a human, the virus is passed
on. The pig doesn't get sick as such. The Nipah virus causes pneumonia symptoms
in pigs. In humans, it causes encephalitis, and humans catch it only with direct
contact with infected pigs. Symptoms range from mild headache to permanent brain
damage, and can be fatal.
It's merely a phenomenon
of nature that the pig is the "mixing vessel" for the new germ. But make no
mistake, the pig is not the villain, neither is the chicken. It's actually us,
and our horrible farm practices, outdated agricultural policy and, most of all,
reckless disregard of our ecology and environment. "Hygiene and management can
control what eventually happens," says Lam. "Good farming practice will prevent
serious outbreaks and infection to humans." Despite knowing that, animal
diseases and the possibility of transmission to humans are becoming quite
alarming. Of the 35 new emerging diseases in the last 20 years, more than 70 per
cent involved animals.
In fact, what we may
have done is unwittingly create the perfect launch pad for an influenza pandemic
that will likely kill large numbers of people across the globe. Although
scientists say it's impossible to predict the odds that the virus will alter its
genetic form radically enough to start leaping from human to human, the longer
H5N1 is out there killing chickens, the higher the chances are.
1. Which of the
following statement can be inferred from the passage?
(A) New emerging
diseases causes more deaths of human than animal.
(B) Animals are the
villain for most flues.
(C) Hygiene and
management can not control the spread of viruses.
(D) The current bird flu
epidemic may be a launch pad for the next influenza pandemic.
(E) The influenza
pandemic is always a regional phenomenon.
Which answer is correct?
For choice A, the passage did not make any comparison between deaths of human
and deaths of animal. In B, animal is actually not the villain for most flues.
Rather, it is human. Look at the second sentence in the fourth paragraph, "But
make no mistake, the pig is not the villain, neither is the chicken."
For C, "Hygiene and management can control what eventually happens"(in
the middle of fourth paragraph), therefore, C is incorrect. E is also incorrect.
Though most flues discussed in this passage were originated from some areas, the
passage never stated it was a regional phenomenon. In fact, it "will
likely kill large numbers of people across the globe", as stated at the
beginning of last paragraph. The correct answer is D – the current bird flu
epidemic may be a launch pad for the next influenza pandemic, because no animal
has preexisting immunity and it causes a pandemic by spreading from human to
human.
2. Which of the
following best describes the topic of the passage?
(A) What causes the
Nipah virus and Japanese Encephalitis virus to happen?
(B) Does Hong Kong flu
originate from pig?
(C) From fowl to pigs to
humans?
(D) Is influenza
pandemic horrible?
(E) Shall we eat
chicken?
This question asks you
to find a title for the passage. In other word, it requires you to identify the
primary concern of the passage as a whole. The first paragraph presents a recent
virus. The second and third paragraphs describe similar influenza pandemics in
history. The fourth paragraph concludes who should be responsible for the spread
of virus and what human can do to control. The last paragraph indicates that
people stimulated rather than inhibited its promulgation. We can thus conclude
the current virus will also leap to human. Furthermore, the passage as a whole
is to "ring alarm bells". Therefore, C is the best answer.
3. All of the following
situations are similar to the spread of avian flu virus described in the first
paragraph EXCEPT:
(A) The BT2 spread from
a pig to another pig, and thus causes significant disease in pig.
(B) The AIDS viruses
transferred from monkeys to man and spread across the world.
(C) The SARS virus
originates from some wildlife and is picked up by civet cats from which humans
got it.
(D) Nipah virus
circulates in the blood of infected pig, which is bitten by Culex mosquitoes,
the virus replicates in the mosquito's gut. The next time the mosquito bites a
human, the virus is passed on.
(E) H5N1 starts in
chickens and leaps from human to human.
The question requires
you to recognize a situation that is not similar to the spear of avian flu.
Before considering following answer choices, we fist define its rationale. It is
something like this: Avian flu virus picked up by pigs and is transferred to
human. All of the situations described in the answer choices are similar to it
ex that in choice A (from animal to animal). Therefore, A is the best answer.
4. What does the author
mean by describing the pig as "mixing vessel"?
(A) Pig is the place
where various viruses reside.
(B) Pig is the pot in
which viruses swap genes and become new, deadly germs.
(C) Viruses are mixed
inside the body of pig.
(D) New germs come to
the body of pig and reside there.
(E) Pig attracts
viruses.
The question requires
you to determine the meanings of "mixing vessel". At the beginning of the
passage, the author states that "Avian flu virus picked up by pigs can
swap genetic materials with another flu virus already in the pig and become a
new, hitherto unknown flu virus for which no person, no animal has
preexisting immunity. The kind of virus causes a pandemic because it spreads
from human to human." In other words, pig is the pot in which viruses swap
genes and become new, deadly germs. Therefore, the correct answer is B.
Indian firms have
achieved the highest levels of efficiency in the world software outsourcing
industry. Some researchers have assumed that Indian firms use the same
programming languages and techniques as Chinese firms but have benefited from
their familiarity with English, the language used to write software code.
However, if this were true, then one would expect software vendors in Hong Kong,
where most people speak English, to perform not worse than do Indian vendors.
However, this is obviously not the case.
Other researchers link
high Indian productivity to higher levels of human resource investment per
engineer. But a historical perspective leads to a different conclusion. When the
two top Indian vendors matched and then doubled Chinese productivity levels in
the mid-eighties, human resource investment per employee was comparable to that
of Chinese vendors. Furthermore, by the late eighties, the amount of fixed
assets required to develop one software package was roughly equivalent in India
and in the China. Since human resource investment was not higher in India, it
had to be other factors that led to higher productivity.
A more fruitful
explanation may lie with Indian strategic approach in outsourcing. Indian
software vendors did not simply seek outsourced contract more effectively: they
made aggressive strategic in outsourcing. For instance, most software firms of
India were initially set up to outsource the contract in western countries, such
as United States. By contrary, most Chinese firms seem to position their
business in China, a promising yet under-developed market. However, rampant
piracy in China took almost 90 percents of potential market, making it
impossible for most Chinese firms to obtain sufficient compensation for the
investment on development and research, let alone thrive in competitive
environment.
5. Which of the
following statements concerning the productivity levels of engineers can be
inferred from the passage?
(A) Prior to the 1980's,
the productivity levels of the top Indian software firms were exceeded by those
of Chinese software firms.
(B) The official
language of a country has a large effect on the productivity levels of its
software developers.
(C) During the late
1980's and early 1990's, productivity levels were comparable in China and India.
(D) The greater the
number of engineers that a software firm has, the higher a firm's productivity
level.
(E) The amount of human
resource investment made by software developers in their firms determines the
level of productivity.
If you do
not refer to the original passage, you may pick up B. For test-takers who have
some backgrounds in computer, it is obvious that being familiar with English
will gain some advantage in writing program code. However, the correct answer is
C.
6. The primary purpose
of the passage is to
(A) contrast possible
outcomes of a type of business strategy
(B) suggest more careful
evaluation of a type of business strategy
(C) illustrate various
ways in which a type of business strategy could fail to enhance revenues
(D) trace the general
problems of a company to a certain type of business strategy
(E) criticize the way in
which managers tend to analyze the costs and benefits of business strategies
This
question asks you to summarize the passage's central idea. Which of the five
choices is correct? Based on the verbs initiating the five choices, you can
eliminate three of them:
(A)
incorrect. To contrast is to compare several things, but not to agree or
disagree.
(C)
incorrect. To illustrate is to give example, not to agree or disagree.
(D)
incorrect. To trace is to track, not to agree or disagree.
Choice E
began with argumental word criticize, but isn't the correct choice
because it addresses the detail. Therefore, B is the right answer: to argue that
superior service does not generate competitive advantage is to suggest more
careful evaluation of a type of business strategy (price reduction).
7. Which of the
following best describes the organization of the first paragraph?
(A) A thesis is
presented and supporting examples are provided.
(B) Opposing views are
presented, classified, and then reconciled.
(C) A fact is stated,
and an explanation is advanced and then refuted.
(D) A theory is
proposed, considered, and then amended.
(E) An opinion is
presented, qualified, and then reaffirmed.
This question requires
you to identify the organizational structure of the first paragraph. In this
paragraph, the author first states a fact that Indian firms achieved the highest
efficiency in software outsourcing. Then, an assumption is presented to explain
such phenomenon. However, the author refuted this explanation soon. Thus, C is
the best answer.
8. According to the
passage, which of the following statements is true of Indian software
developers?
(A) Their productivity
levels did not equal those of Chinese software engineers until the late
eighties.
(B) Their high
efficiency levels are a direct result of English language familiarity.
(C) They develop
component-specific software.
(D) They are built to
outsource the western orders.
(E) They develop more
packages of software than do those in Chinese developers.
In the middle of the
last paragraph, the author states that "For instance, most software firms of
India were initially set up to outsource the contract in western
countries, such as United States." Thus, the best answer is D.
GRE Analogy
Question
with Answer
1. TELESCOPE :
ASTRONOMER ::
(A) picture : artist
(B) environment : ecologist
(C) element : chemist
(D) brush : painter
(E) movie : director
A
"telescope" is an instrument commonly used in the work of an "astronomer".
Therefore, a rationale for this analogy could be "X (a telescope) is an
instrument commonly used in or associated with the work of a person called a Y
(astronomer)." A "brush" is an instrument commonly used in the work of a
"painter." Therefore, D is the best answer.
2. MATRIX
: NUMBER ::
(A) gas : molecule
(B) snow : precipitation
(C) act : opera
(D) school : fish
(E) crystal : atom
You may
define the relationship of the word "matrix" and "number" as: matrix is
composed of numerous numbers. In this way, choice A would be great because
gas is composed of numerous molecules. If you do not move to the last
choice, you will not find a better pair. Choice E is the one. Crystal is defined
as a regular arrangement of atoms. For the setup pair, matrix can be defined as
a regular arrangement of numbers. The two pairs of words perfect match in
relationship. Therefore, E is the best answer.
3. HORSE : MARE ::
(A) cat : kitten
(B) human : woman
(C) bull : cow
(D) child : adult
(E) animal : pig
The first
colon (:) means "to" and the two colons (::) means "is as". We read the question
as "horse to mare is as…" Next, we need to define the relationship between this
pair of words. What is the relationship between horse and mare? A "mare"
is a female horse. So, a rationale for this analogy could be "Y (a mare) is a
female X". Because analogy problems require us to look for a pair of words
that have the same relationship has the initial two words, we are looking for a
pair in which the second word
is a
female of
second word. Once you have determined the relationship between the given pair of
words and state it in your mind in sentence form, read through the answer
choices substituting the possible pairs into the same sentence you have created
to describe the initial pair.
4. MARTIAL
: MILITARY ::
(A) mysterious : runic
(B) tortuous :
straightforward
(C) objective :
subjective
(D) clear :
complicated
(E) imprudent :
damaged
The best answer is A.
5.
HEADSTRONG : WILLFULNESS ::
(A) engrossing :
obliviousness
(B) fawning :
subservience
(C) venerable : renown
(D) bold : tip
(E) critical :
confidence
The best answer is B.
6.
SIMULTANEOUS : COINCIDE ::
(A) gracious :
significance
(B) fast :
acceleration
(C) lavish : squander
(D) intriguing :
project
(E) provocative :
tradition
The best answer is C.
7.
INVINCIBLE : SUBDUED ::
(A) impervious :
damaged
(B) persuasive :
convinced
(C) impossible : taken
(D) invisible :
overlooked
(E) despicable :
contented
The best answer is A.
GRE Antonym
Questions
with Answer
1. PROFOUND
(A)
superficial
(B)
precipitous
(C)
deep
(D)
tarnished
(E)
innocuous
"Profound" means
difficult to understand or far below the surface. In choice A, "superficial"
means lying on surface, directly opposite to the meaning of "profound".
"Precipitous" means steep in rise or fall, "deep" means same as "profound",
"tarnished" means losing luster, and "innocuous" means harmless. Among the five
words, only "superficial" has the meanings that are opposite to the given
capitalized.
2. ARBITRARY
A.
democratic
B.
tyrannous
C.
overbearing
D.
halcyon
E.
responsive
Answer: A
3. ABSTRUSE
A.
sagacious
B.
superficial
C.
contented
D.
rational
E.
subjective
Answer: B
4. TRANQUIL
A.
diminished
B.
calm
C.
edgy
D.
unobstructed
E.
astonishing
Answer: C
5. IMPUDENCE
A.
insolence
B.
preposterous
C.
imaginative
D.
decorum
E.
gratuitous
Answer: D
6. INVIGORATE
A.
inveigle
B.
incapacitate
C.
activate
D.
exonerate
E.
enervate
Answer: E
7. COMPENDIOUS
A.
lengthy
B.
laconic
C.
hypocritical
D.
pliant
E.
fruitful
Answer: A
8. COMPLIMENT
A.
praise
B.
affront
C.
agitate
D.
approbate
E.
masticate
Answer: B
9. INCONSTANCY
A.
changefulness
B.
compression
C.
integrity
D.
variation
E.
parallelism
Answer: C
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