Thea College Exaam
Thea College Exaam
Thea College Exaam
ACET
Practice Test Bookle
t
Name:__________________________________________
High School:___________________________________
Testing Center:________________________________
• Time yourself properly to get an accurate reflection of your test-day performance. s of the test.
• You may work on one section at a time only. Going back or ahead to other sections is strictly prohibited
and will result in the confiscation of your test booklet.
This simulated test was made by a non-profit group. Reproduction of this material for non-commercial
p The passages used in this simulated test do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the
maker
___ B. Fine Arts: Major in Art Management ___ A.B. Interdisciplinary Studies
___ B. Fine Arts: Major in Creative Writing ___ A.B. Literature: English
___ B. Fine Arts: Major in Information Design ___ A.B. Literature: Filipino
___ B. Fine Arts: Major in Theatre Arts ___ A.B. Philosophy
___ A.B. Humanities ___ A.B. Philosophy: Pre-Divinity
___ A.B. Chinese Studies ___ A.B. European Studies ___ A.B. Social Sciences
___ A.B. Communication ___ A.B. History
___ A.B. Development Studies ___ A.B. Management Economics
___ A.B. Diplomacy & International ___ A.B. Political Science
Relations
___ A.B. Economics ___ A.B. Psychology
___ A.B. Economics-Honors (SOSS) ___ B.S. Chemistry (SOSE) ___ B.S. Health Sciences (SOSE)
___ A.B. /M. Political Science & Public ___ B.S. Chemistry/Applied Computer ___ B.S. Mathematics (SOSE)
Management (SOSS) Systems (SOSE)
___ A.B. /M.A. Political Science (SOSS) ___ B.S. Computer Science (SOSE) ___ B.S. Applied Mathematics:
Mathematical Finance (SOSE)
___ B.S. Psychology (SOSS) ___ B.S. /M.S. Computer Science ___ B.S. Applied Physics/Applied
(SOSE) Computer Systems (SOSE)
___ B.S. Biology (SOSE) ___ B.S. Life Sciences (SOSE) ___ B.S. Applied Physics/Material
Sciences and Engineering (SOSE)
___ B.S. Information Technology & ___ B.S. Management-Honors ___ B.S. Management Engineering
Entrepreneurship (SOSE) (JGSOM) (JGSOM)
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I. Essay
Directions: Write an essay on the given topic or prompt. Off topic, illegible, and pen written essays will not be graded and will given a score of
zero.
“Pain and suffering are always inevitable for a large intelligence and a deep heart. The really great men must, I think, have great
sadness on earth.”
-Fyodor Dostoyevsky
If higher levels of knowledge and thought lead to inevitable suffering, why do men continue to strive for more knowledge and
depth in life? Does ignorance not lead to a more blissful, happier state of being?
1. In the 1990’s, the People’s Republic of China grew economically, territorially, and culturally. No Error.
A B C D
2. Latin is practically a dead language, spoken only by students, academics, and the Catholic clergy. No Error.
A B C D
3. In November 29, 1890, the Imperial Japanese Diet convened for the first time. No Error
A B C D
4. The financial expert which flew in to advice the president, came from London. No Error.
A B C D
5. In 2010, Harvard University had an acceptance rate of 6.9%, and will have rejected students with perfect SAT scores.
A B C
No Error.
D
6. Akihiro tried to acquire as many of the valuable and groundbreaking knowledge as he can from the lecture. No Error.
A B C D
7. Ateneo’s rank of 307 in the 2010 QS University rankings is far ahead of La Salle, ranked 451. No Error.
A B C D
8. The Continental Congress is drafting a constitution for the delegates they will address in June. No Error.
A B C D
9. Xabi Alonso’s shot was wide off the mark and the goalkeeper Casillias did not have to make a save. No Error.
A B C D
10. The proposal made by the British Labour Party was in opposition of privatization of state holdings. No Error.
A B C D
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II. Sentence Completion: Select the word/words that best completes/ the sentence.
11. Just like National Bookstore, Barnes & Noble sells 12. The Royal Albert Hall ____ South Kensington,
_____ and writing tools. London, was opened by Queen Victoria in 1871.
a. Stationary a. On
b. Stationery b. In
c. Stationarry c. Over
d. Stationairy d. Along
13. Alexei had ______ over the vast Siberian expanse 14. As one continues to play basketball, ____ will realize
more than once. that handling the ball becomes second nature.
a. Drove a. He
b. Drived b. They
c. Driven c. I
d. Been Driving d. One
15. My dad gave Erik and ____ some UAAP season 16. Economics students in Cambridge University’s Trinity
tickets. College are tipped to become ______ in the future.
a. Me a. A technocrat
b. I b. Technocrats
c. Them c. Technocrat inclined
d. Us d. Technocrats themselves
17. Johnny _____ ate the cookies by the time we got 18. Students prefer the Ateneo ____ other private
home. colleges and universities because of the unique Jesuit
education it provides.
a. All ready
b. Al ready a. Than
c. Already b. More than
d. Readily c. To
d. Compared to
19. The amalgamation of the various unions across the 20. Neither Mikhail Gorbachev ____ Boris Yeltsin
country _____ given workers more leverage. emerged from the collapse of the Soviet Union with
his reputation intact.
a. Has
b. Have a. Or
c. Had b. Nor
d. Will have c. And
d. But
III. Vocabulary
A. Synonyms: Select the word/s that best capture the meaning of the italicized word.
23. The candidate committed a serious faux pas when he 24. George Orwell brilliantly portrayed a socialist
described the laborers as “ignorant.” dystopia in his book 1984.
a. Sin a. Fable
b. Misstep b. Anti-utopia
c. Offense c. Myth
d. Insult d. Utopia
25. Fabio never liked the ancient necropolis at the 26. The Pope appointed a new apostolic nuncio to France.
outskirts of town.
a. Bishop
a. A large and old cemetery b. Cardinal
b. A city on a hill c. Envoy
c. An elevated villa d. Prelate
d. A dark city
27. In medieval England, papists, or Catholics, could be 28. In the U.K. the name of the Scottish city Edinburgh,
obtruncated if caught. in the vernacular, is actually pronounced “E-
dinburrah.”
a. Deported
b. Beheaded a. Native Language or Dialect
c. Tortured b. Local Slang
d. Imprisoned c. Peculiar manner
d. Surrounding area
29. The nomadic Mongols lived in yurts since the days of 30. The Apotheosis of Washington is a unique work of art
Genghis Khan. that can be found in the U.S. Capitol.
a. Tents a. Glorification
b. Houses b. Deification
c. Caravans c. Inauguration
d. Wagons d. Archetype
B. Antonyms: Select the word that is the opposite of the meaning of the highlighted word. Choose the best
answer available.
31. The defendant was acquitted by the court in 32. Van Gogh certainly wasn’t a proponent of achromatic
yesterday’s hearing. painting.
a. Arrested a. Colorful
b. Absolved b. Abstract
c. Convicted c. Matte
d. Released d. Multifaceted
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a. Acidulation a. Underdog
b. Decimation b. Pessimist
c. Abdication c. Antagonist
d. Denunciation d. Naysayer
35. It was thought as late as the 1960’s that a proletarian 36. The shaft that kept the roof up stayed rigid, even as
takeover was inevitable. the wind and rain gained strength.
a. Bourgeoisie a. Flaccid
b. Anarchist b. Pliable
c. Elitist c. Broken
d. Government d. Bent
37. Back in her time, Margaret Thatcher was an eminent 38. The redoubtable Netherlands football squad, stacked
world leader, although she was very unpopular with with world-class players, was humbled in the recent
the U.K.’s leftist north. European Championships.
a. Infamous a. Feeble
b. Obscure b. Doubtable
c. Unimportant c. Formidable
d. Articulate d. Perturbing
39. The government proved to be profligate in its 40. Germany abrogated its agreements with the Allied
spending, constructing unnecessary theatres and powers, continuing with the Anschluß and the
convention centers. annexation of Czechoslovakia.
a. Wise a. Ratified
b. Careful b. Liquidated
c. Frugal c. Permitted
d. Creative d. Countermanded
IV. Improving sentences: Select the item that will change the underlined portion and make the sentence grammatically
correct and more effective. Select choice A if no improvement is necessary. Choose the best answer.
41. Having moderated inflation, economic growth and the 42. Right of the bat, the critics told the painter that his work was
rapid creation of jobs is the objective of the incoming horrendous.
administration.
a. Right of the bat, the critics
a. Having moderated inflation, economic growth and the b. Right off the bat, the critics
rapid creation of jobs is c. Right with the bat, the critics had
b. Having moderated inflation, economic growth and jobs d. Right on the bat, critics have
created is already
c. Having moderated inflation, economic growth and rapid
creation of jobs are
d. Having moderated inflation, economic growth and rapid
job creation is
45. Frederick the Great of Prussia exhibited wisdom and being 46. The unification of the English and Scottish monarchies was
idealistic, traits appropriate for the ideal monarch that the the cause of much friction in the new British state.
Enlightenment thinkers portrayed him as.
a. Monarchies was the cause
a. Exhibited wisdom and being idealistic, traits appropriate b. Monarchies were the cause
b. Exhibited wisdom and idealism c. Monarchies caused
c. Exhibited wisdom and idealistic traits that are especially d. Monarchy were a divisive cause
proper
d. Exhibited wisdom and idealism, traits appropriate
47. The tensions between Japan and China were so high as to 48. By the age of 21, most children in the world of today would
both countries have prepared their militaries for a have gone on to live by themselves.
potential attack.
a. Most children in the world of today
a. China were so high as to both countries b. Most children in the modern world
b. China was so high that both countries c. Most children now
c. China were so high that both countries d. Most children, as of the present,
d. China were so high that both, beginning today with missile
barriers
49. The Philippine economy grew by 7.8%, which is higher 50. The Ateneo is one of the oldest institutions in Asia, dating
than China, which grew by 7.5%. back to the 1800’s, when the Jesuits returned from its
exile.
a. Which is higher than China, which drew by 7.5%
b. Which is higher than 7.5%. a. To the 1800’s, when the Jesuits returned from its exile.
c. Which is higher than China’s growth of 7.5%. b. In the 1800’s, when the Jesuits returned it from exile.
d. Which is higher than the Chinese rate of growth. c. In the 1800’s, when the Jesuits have returned from their
extensive exile.
d. To the 1800’s, when the Jesuits returned from their exile.
V. Improving Paragraphs: Read the given paragraph and answer the questions that follow. Choose the most effective and
grammatically correct answer.
This is the first draft of an essay written by a journalist. It has multiple errors in usage and grammar.
1 The Japanese have built a reputation for the most eccentric things.
2 Its difficult to find a place to begin with, as this eccentricity is present in most facets of Japanese life.
3 For example, to show how this eccentricity affects everything, we can start with the humble toilet.
5 First off, is the famous Washlet, which is one of the most advanced toilets in the world.
6 These toilets have heated seats, warm water massages, warm air dryers, automatic deodorizers and a digital
thermostat.
7 Also, one more Japanese oddity in the toilet world is the Otohime or “Sound Princess.”
8 These devices are available in women’s cubicles, mainly because Japanese women feel ashamed when other people hear
the sounds they make when they are in the toilet.
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51. How can the first sentence be improved? 52. Which part of sentence 2 is erroneous?
53. After which sentence is it most appropriate to begin a new 54. Which sentence should be removed?
paragraph?
a. 2
a. 1 b. 4
b. 6 c. 9
c. 9 d. 6
d. 2
55. How can sentence 7 be improved? 56. What is wrong with sentence 9?
VI. Paragraph Arrangement: Arrange the sentences in a coherent and logical manner, in the form of a paragraph. Select the
best answer from among the choices.
a. Before him, people thought of themselves as beings that were special, set apart from all creation.
b. With this is mind, the notion of being no different from the heathen chimpanzees in the rainforests of Africa caused
quite a stir back in his day.
c. In time, Darwin has proved that he was correct, and his theory is now generally accepted students, teachers and
academics everywhere.
d. Charles Darwin was the man who formulated the theory of evolution.
57. What should be the first sentence? 58. What should be the last sentence?
a. (a) a. (a)
b. (b) b. (b)
c. (c) c. (c)
d. (d) d. (d)
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STOP!
-END OF SECTION-
Section 2
General Information
61-85
25 items; 10 minutes
61. The first nation to launch a satellite and a man to space 62. Taiwan’s official name is ______.
was ______.
a. Republic of China
a. The United States of America b. Chinese Taipei
b. The United Kingdom c. Republic of Taiwan
c. Japan d. Kuomintang
d. The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
63. Who was the author of Catcher in the Rye? 64. What was the most downloaded song on iTunes in
the year 2012?
a. Henry Thoreau
b. Matthew Emerson a. “Starships” – Nicky Minaj
c. J.D. Salinger b. “Call me Maybe” – Carly Rae Jepsen
d. William Faulkner c. “Payphone” – Maroon 5
d. “What Makes You Beautiful” – One Direction
65. Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago narrowly lost a 66. Who was the Japanese emperor that presided over
presidential election against which candidate? Japan’s transition towards modernization?
67. When was the Ateneo founded? 68. When a human is infected with the Human
Papillomavirus (HPV), _____ may occur.
a. 1901
b. 1764 a. HIV/AIDS
c. 1829 b. Sore Eyes
d. 1859 c. Warts
d. Smallpox
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71. Which writer wrote Historie de ma vie and became 72. The Ottoman Empire had its beginnings where?
famous in history for his womanizing?
a. Anatolia
a. Henry XIII b. Syria
b. Giacomo Casanova c. Persia
c. Maximilien de Robespierre d. Constantinople
d. Amerigo Vespucci
73. Which is the 12th longest river in the world? 74. During the Seven Years’ War, which country occupied
Manila and most of Luzon?
a. Yangtze
b. Amazon a. The Netherlands
c. Mississippi b. Spain
d. Mekong c. France
d. Great Britain
75. Which is not part of the United Kingdom? 76. What is inscribed on the gates of hell in Dante’s
Inferno?
a. Scotland
b. Wales a. “Through me you go into a city of weeping; through me you
c. Ireland go into eternal pain; through me you go amongst the lost
people”
d. England
b. “Abandon all hope, ye who enter here.”
c. “Thence we came forth to rebehold the stars.”
d. “Hope not ever to see heaven again.”
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79. Which was the last dynasty to rule over China? 80. Where are white blood cells in the human body made?
81. Which celebrity/personality has the most number of 82. North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un was educated
Twitter followers? where?
83. Who made St. Peter’s Baldachin or Ciborium in St. 84. On the feast day of whom did the Imperial Japanese
Peter’s Basilica? Army invade the Philippines?
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a. Silesia
b. Venice
c. Vienna
d. Salzburg
STOP!
-END OF SECTION-
--Do not turn to any other section—
Section 3
Mathematics
86-145
60 items; 50 minutes
Instructions: You will be given questions that test your ability in mathematics. Choose the best and simplest answer from among the choices. Take note that
figures are not drawn to scale.
86. 27,813 students took the ACET this year. If only x2 +25
2,836 students were admitted into the Ateneo among
those students, what is the Ateneo’s acceptance rate? 87. Simplify the expression: 2
x −10x+25
a. 7.5%
b. 10.2% a. (x-5)
c. 13.4% b. (x+5)
d. 9.0% c. -10x
14
90. The tuition fee of two semesters in the Loyola 91. What is the x-intercept of y=17x+51?
Schools costs 150,000. If the fee increases at the rate
of 5% per year, around how much will the tuition be a. 5
in 5 years for one semester? b. 3
a. 182,326 c. 14
b. 81,274 d. -3
c. 95,721
d. 191,443
92. Given inscribed angle θ, what is the angle of central 93. Given that x3x5 =y8, what is y3 equal to if x=4?
angle δ, which subtends the same arc?
a. 64
b. 24
a. δ2 c. 16
b. θδ d. 42
c. 90
d.
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c. 36π
d. 40π
97. Given the figure, what is the x-intercept of the ray with 98. Given the figure, where AC=5, and BC=12, what is
endpoint (0,3)? the area of the shaded portions of the circle?
a. (0, 3)
b. (0, 2) a. 21.125π − 30
c. (0,1) b. 20π + 30
d. (0, 2.1) c. 14π − 30
d. 13π − 30
16
b. (5, 10)
c. (1, 12)
d. (1, 24)
a. -1
b. 567
c. 2
d. -6
101. What is the standard deviation of the set of values 102. What is the surface area of a rectangular prism that
{2,4,4,4,5,7, 9}? has a length of 7, a width of 5 and a height of 6?
a. 4 a. 221
b. 2 b. 198
c. 7 c. 214
d. 9 d. 266
c. 4
d. sec θ
2
d. 21
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18
b. An absolute value
b. x+4
c. An exponent
c. x3
d. A regression
d. 2 x+4
113. When the perimeter of square ABCD is doubled, then its area, x,
114. If 5x+n=45+2n , what is n in terms of x?
will be ____.
a. Quadrupled
n
a. 9+ 5
b. Doubled
b. 5x+45
c. Squared
d. Cubed c. −45+5x
d. x−9
x3
=y 5 a. y
a. One y3
b. Two b. +
42
c. Three
c. 46+y
d. More than three
d. 4 4y+6
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b. 8 cm
b. π c. 4 cm
c. 0.8π d. 0.25 cm
d. 1.2566
119. The sum of two integral numbers is 20. The larger 120. The ratio of females to males in the Loyola Schools is
number is the square of the smaller number, and the larger 4:6. If you add the 6000 male students of the Grade School
number when squared, has a value greater than 600. What and High School to the 8000 students of the Loyola Schools,
are the two numbers?
what will be the approximate ratio of females to males? a.
a. 16 and 4 3:10
b. 25 and -5 b. 2:5
c. 36 and 6 c. 3:20
d. 23 and -3 d. 4:11
121. What is the 6th term of this series? 122. Given a circle with the equation
1, 5, 11, 17, 33… (x−4)2 +(y−6)2 = 49, what is the equation of the line that
intersects the origin and the center?
a. 61
b. 50
a. y= x
c. 59
b. y=7x+6
d. 47
c. y=3x
d. y= x
20
125. What is the area of a circle inscribed in a square with diagonals 126. Given this figure, what is the length of x? (Reminder: figures
are not drawn to scale.)
that are 4 2 units long? a. 32π
b. 4π
c. 16π
d. 8π
a. 9
b. 6
c. 1.5
d. 3
127. log5 z = 2. What is the value of z? 128. The Trans-Siberian Railway travels 9000 km from Vladivostok
to Moscow in 4 days. It then travels another 3000 km from Moscow
a. 10 to Novosibirsk in 1 day. What is the average speed of the train in
kilometers per hour throughout its journey?
b. 5/2
a. 100 km/hr
c. 7
b. 90 km/hr
d. 25
c. 110 km/hr
d. 120 km/hr
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a. 42 a. 254 pesos
b. 43 b. 270 pesos
c. 284 pesos
c. 33
d. 195 pesos
d. 3
131. The amount of sodas sold, x, is inversely proportional to its 132. What is the length of the longest segment that can fit
price, y. Which of the following could be the equation that into a cube with sides 4 cm long?
represents the relationship between the sodas sold and its price?
a. 83
a. xy=40
b. 43
b. x y=40
c. 51
c. x2y2 =40
d. 4 2+5
d. x2y=40
133. What is the point of intersection of the following lines? 134. What is the value of one internal angle of a regular
decagon?
y=2x+1 y=−2x−2
a. 1440
a. (0, 1)
b. 140
b. (1, -2)
c. 144
c. (-1, -1)
d. 120
d. (-1, -2)
135. For general exponential functions, where f 136. Which is a possible value of x in the equation
(x) = b , what should be the value of base b?
x
2x2 +7x+6=0?
a. A positive integer
b. A negative integer a. −
b. -2
c. A whole number
c. 2
d. A positive constant
d.
22
22y {1,1,2,2,4,5,5,5,7}
x−4 a. 5
a. {x | x∈R,x≠ 4} b. 7
b.{x | x∈R,x≠±4} c. 4
d. 1
c.{x | x∉W }
d.{x | x= 4}
11 140. What is the surface area of a cylinder with a height of
139. If + =z, then z is equal to what? x y 5 and a radius of 4? a. 72π
a. Insufficient b. 40π
information
given. c. 32π2
2 d. 69π+32
b. xy
x+y
c. xy
2
d. x+y
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STOP
--END OF SECTION—
Do not turn to any other sections.
24
146. Cow: Plants :: Termite: _____. 147. Thin: Portly; Irate: _____.
a. Furniture a. Furious
b. Insect b. Calm
c. Wood c. Confused
d. Mound d. Organized
a. Pond a. Paleopathologist
b. Ocean b. Podiatrist
c. Lake c. Orthopedist
d. Glacier d. Gerontologist
a. Celebrate a. Tree
b. Dissolve b. Axe
c. Destroy c. Fire
d. Oppose d. Water
a. Water a. Extinction
b. Spin b. Dissipation
c. Engineer c. Emancipation
d. Rotate d. Infection
a. Sadness a. Workers
b.Mysteries b. Voters
c.Memories c. Unions
d. Creativity d. Colleges
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B. Paired Word Analogy: Select the pair of words that are related in a similar manner to those given in the number.
26
Section 5
Logical Reasoning
166-175
10 items; 10 minutes
A. Select the statement that follows the stated logic of the question. Choose the best answer.
166. All red items are fruits. A banana is red. All rocks are 167. When a fire burns, smoke is formed. When smoke is
red, therefore ______.
formed, sometimes there is a fire. If there is smoke ______.
a. The rock is a fruit. a. There is fire.
168. If Steven has money, he eats ice cream. If Daniel has 169. All parents are workers. Not all workers are married,
money, he buys ice cream and shares it with Steven. If only and only some parents are married. Some childless people
Steven is eating ice cream____________. are workers. Therefore, _____________.
a. Steven and Daniel had no money. a. Some workers have neither a spouse nor a child.
d. Steven and Daniel both have money. d. No single workers are parents.
170. In an unknown language “Ya smertel medveda,vsegda.” 171. When the university’s basketball team does well, alumni
means That over there is the bear’s prey. In the same contributions increase. When it doesn’t it decreases. This
year, the team did not do well, therefore____________.
language, the sentence “Ya Otchizne krasniy medved,” means
That big bear is red. What word most probably means bear? a. The team will do well next year.
a. “Ya”
b. Alumni contributions will increase.
b. “Vsegda”
c. Alumni contributions will remain the same.
c. ”Medved”
d. Alumni contributions will decrease.
d. ”Krasniy”
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174. For questions 174-175, read the following passage: 175. If Dan and Martin must start together, what is the only
possible starting lineup?
The coach of the college basketball team needs to pick 5
players for the starting lineup from James, Franco, Miguel, a. James, Martin, Dan, Chris, Josh
Ricky, Dan, Martin, Josh and Chris. The starting lineup must
include only one big man and one guard. b. Martin, Dan, Chris, Ricky, Franco
Martin, Franco and Ricky are guards. Dan and Josh are big c. Martin, Franco, Chris, Miguel, James
men. Which of the following are possible starting lineups?
d. Martin, Dan, Chris, Miguel, James
a. James, Franco, Chris, Josh, Miguel.
28
Section 6
Reading Comprehension
176-250
75 items; 1 hour and10 minutes
A. Passage-Based Reading: You will be given sets of passages that cover various topics. With these passages are questions that test your ability to infer,
comprehend, and understand a reading material effectively. Choose the letter of the answer that best answers the question.
1 Culion was called the “Island of the Living Dead” or the “Island of No Return.” Once the largest leper colony in the world, it stands today as a stark
reminder of life in the Philippines when leprosy was still an incurable disease, and a testament to how leprosy was eradicated not just in the Philippines but
in the entire world. It shows how technology and advances in medicine have improved and changed the way we live today.
4 Culion was selected as the containment area of all those with leprosy in the Philippines during the American period. At that time, leprosy was incurable
and the only way to stop its spread was to isolate all those afflicted with the disease. People with leprosy were rounded up like criminals to be sent to the
island, most certainly to die given that there was no cure.
7 The government apprehended lepers, detained them and sent them for isolation on the island on ships every three months. 25 years after its founding,
16,138 lepers were patients on Culion’s roster, making it the largest leper colony in the world in its time. The large number of patients also made Culion a
natural choice for scientists who sought the cure that will eradicate leprosy from the world.
176. When was Culion founded as a leper colony? 177. Why was Culion needed?
a. In the Spanish colonial era a. Leprosy was unsightly and people preferred to have
lepers hidden away.
b. In the pre-Hispanic era
b. Researchers needed subjects for the new cures they
c. In the post-World War 2 era were creating.
d. The American period c. To stop the spread of leprosy, which was incurable.
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a. List a. All people who visit the island never come back.
6 Here.
It will blind you with tears like
a lover.
It will make your reflection a
wobbling photo of grief.
11 I am trying to be truthful.
18 Take it.
Its platinum loops shrink to a wedding ring, if
you like.
21 Lethal.
Its scent will cling to your fingers, cling
to your knife.
**A person sent to kiss another person on behalf of a lover on special occasions like Valentine’s.
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183. Lines 13-15 and line 22 show that one reason the author used the onion 184. How does the poem flow from beginning to end?
for her metaphor is _________.
a. It starts with a broken relationship that eventually descends into
a. Because it turns foul quickly, as love eventually does. murder.
b. Because it induces tears, like a quarrel between lovers. b. It starts with an insulting symbol and ends with a threatening
symbol.
c. Because the onion provides shock value.
c. It begins with the enchanting first encounters with love and
d. Because the smell of an onion clings, just as lovers cling to each descends into possessiveness, and finally, conflict.
other and their memories.
d. It starts and ends with condescending references to naïve love.
185. What do lines 4-5, shown below, symbolize? 186. Why does the author mention the word knife in line 23?
“It promises light, like the careful undressing of love.” a. To show the relationship between the knife and the onion
a. It symbolizes the pleasant first adventures and experiences of love. b. To end on a grim tone
b. It symbolizes unbridled lust. c. To represent the escalating of conflict between the lovers
c. It is meant to be a literal representation of an onion d. To hint that the lovers killed each other and their children
1 Swedish snapshot A: Shows a taxed-to-the-eyeballs welfare state where the government grabs more than 52% of the country’s GDP—the highest
percentage of any industrial country. A Swedish businessman who earns Euro 200,000 a year gets to keep just 49% of his paycheck. Of OECD countries, only
France comes close to Sweden in taxing its most successful businesspeople.
4 Swedish snapshot B: Shows a booming economy bubbling with entrepreneurial activity. Growth is predicted to be 3.5% for 2001; inflation, 1.7%;
unemployment, 4% (less than half the European average). In 1999, according to the European Information Technology Observatory, Sweden ranked first in
the world in investment in information technology and telecommunications. Venture capital is pouring into Sweden, and labor productivity is rocketing:
From 1990 to 1999 productivity climbed 47% in Sweden, against 39% in the U.S. and 31% (on average) in the EU. Last year, Sweden topped the global
standings in R&D spending as a percentage of GDP with 3.7% (in the U.S. it was 3.1%), according to the OECD. How to reconcile snapshots A and B? Is
Sweden a bloated welfare state? Or a People’s Republic of Entrepreneurs?
10 The answer is that it’s a mixture of both. But the entrepreneurial part of the mix is rapidly gaining ascendancy. One yardstick is the number of business
startups. They averaged 29,000 a year between 1984 and 1989 and 36,000 between 1994 and 1999, an increase of nearly 25%.
Cradle-to-grave security is the rule in Sweden, and has been since the early 1950s (the country went socialist in 1932). Go on the dole in Sweden, for example,
and you can get 80% of your last job’s pay for at least five years. Like to fish? The government will put you in a twelve-month program to learn how to be a
fishing guide. Health care is free. So is education; Hence those obscenely high taxes.
15 Less well known, however, is that starting in the early 1990s, Sweden finally woke up to the fact that to be successful, a country needs entrepreneurs. No
entrepreneurs, no new businesses. No new businesses, rising unemployment. Rising unemployment, politicians looking for new jobs—or new careers.
Deciding that they like their jobs, a new generation of Swedish Social Democrats has created a much more friendly environment for business. Sweden is not a
capitalistic heaven on earth, but it’s not the hell on earth for entrepreneurs that it was until a few years ago.
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189. How does Snapshot B support the fact that Sweden is a booming 190. Why does the author refer to Sweden as a “People’s Republic of
economy? Entrepreneurs?”
a. By relaying anecdotes on the Swedish economy. a. To present Sweden as a model of an ideal, egalitarian society.
b. By directly contrasting it with Snapshot A. b. To show Swedish totalitarianism.
c. By providing statistics. c. To discredit Sweden.
d. By quoting expert opinion. d. To compare Sweden to a socialist state.
191. How does the author respond to the questions posed at the end of line 192.What happened to the number of startups between 1984 and 1999?
9?
a. It increased steadily
a. By saying that Snapshot B is correct b. It increased exponentially
b. By stating that it is a amalgamation of both descriptions c. It stagnated
c. By dismissing both statements as erroneous. d. It decreased slowly
d. By qualifying both statements as true on different levels.
193. According to the passage, why are taxes high in Sweden? 194. According to line 15, what does a country need to be successful?
195. How did the Swedish Social Democrats respond to the new needs of 196. From lines 17-18, it can be inferred that ______.
Sweden?
a. The Swedes returned to socialism a few years ago.
a. It democratized society. b. The Swedish Social Democrats cemented their hold on government
b. It lowered taxes back to normal levels for industrial countries. by abolishing other parties.
c. It created a more business friendly atmosphere. c. Entrepreneurs are starting to have a more difficult time doing
d. It gave jobs to entrepreneurs in government. business.
d. The Swedes learned to construct a compromise between the
extremes of socialism and capitalism.
PASSAGE 4A: Taken from Emily Anthes, the New York Times. March 9, 2013. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/10/opinion/sunday/dont-be-afraidof-
genetic-modification.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
2 In 1993, the company approached the Food and Drug Administration about selling a genetically modified salmon that grew faster than normal fish. In
1995, AquaBounty formally applied for approval. Last month, more than 17 years later, the public comment period, one of the last steps in the approval
process, was finally supposed to conclude. But the F.D.A. has extended the deadline — members of the public now have until late April to submit their
thoughts on the AquAdvantage salmon. It’s just one more delay in a process that’s dragged on far too long.
6 The AquAdvantage fish is an Atlantic salmon that carries two foreign bits of DNA: a growth hormone gene from the Chinook salmon that is under the
control of a genetic “switch” from the ocean pout, an eel-like fish that lives in the chilly deep. Normally, Atlantic salmon produce growth hormone only in the
32
10 If the modified fish is approved, which could still happen later this year, it will be the first transgenic animal to officially enter the human food supply.
Appropriately, it has been subjected to rigorous reviews, with scientists all over the country weighing in on whether it is fit for human consumption and what
might happen if it was to make its way into the wild. Some environmentalists fear that the modified salmon might wriggle free from fish farms, start
reproducing, and ultimately drive wild salmon populations to extinction.
But scientists, including the F.D.A.’s experts, have concluded that the fish is just as safe to eat as conventional salmon and that, raised in isolated tanks, it
poses little risk to wild populations.
16 This decision isn’t meant to be made quickly; due scientific diligence requires time. But some suspect that political considerations have played a role in
drawing the approval process out to tortuous lengths. Many of the members of Congress who oppose the modified fish represent states with strong salmon
industries. And some nonprofit groups seem to be opposing the modified salmon reflexively, as part of an agenda to oppose all animal biotechnology,
regardless of its safety or potential benefits.
20 We should all be rooting for the agency to do the right thing and approve the AquAdvantage salmon. It’s a healthy and relatively cheap food source that,
as global demand for fish increases, can take some pressure off our wild fish stocks. But most important, a rejection will have a chilling effect on
biotechnological innovation in this country.
23 Some scientists may move abroad, to China, Argentina, India or another nation where the political climate is more favorable. (Indeed, some have already
done so — researchers at the University of California, Davis, who have developed goats whose modified milk could be used to treat and prevent childhood
diarrhea, are moving much of their operation to Brazil.) Others may decide not to pursue such research at all. If a company that has done everything right
can’t get its product approved, who else will be foolish enough to embark upon this kind of research? Who will finance it?
Of course, all this would be just fine with some anti-biotech groups, which traffic in scare tactics rather than science. But it shouldn’t be fine with the rest of
us.
29 The F.D.A. must make sure that other promising genetically modified animals don’t come to the same end. Of course every application needs to be
painstakingly evaluated, and not every modified animal should be approved. But in cases like AquaBounty’s, where all the available evidence indicates that
the animals are safe, we shouldn’t let political calculations or unfounded fears keep these products off the market. If we do that, we’ll be closing the door on
innovations that could help us face the public health and environmental threats of the future, saving countless animals — and perhaps ourselves.
1 Should we improve our genetic make-up so we live longer, healthier lives? At first, the answer to this question may seem obvious - we all dream of winning
the battle against ageing. But the idea of genetic improvement is deeply flawed.
3 The term "eugenics" was first coined by France Galton in 1883 to mean 'truly' or 'purely' born. It was later developed as 'the science of the improvement of
the human race by better breeding'. Galton's many disciples believed that traits such as intelligence, feeblemindedness, criminality, alcoholism and
prostitution were all caused by genes passed on by parents to successive generations. Eugenicists developed research programmes into all these conditions,
as well as medical conditions such as deafness, blindness, depression, cancer and schizophrenia. They also lobbied for compulsory sterilisation and
incarceration of the genetically unfit and, eventually, in Nazi Germany, for euthanasia.
8 Modern genetics has improved our understanding of genetic disorders such as cystic fibrosis and sickle cell disease. However, there are also important
debates about the extent to which prenatal screening programmes prejudge the value of disabled people's lives. Genetic research into more complex
conditions - such as heart disease - can sometimes help to find clues about the biological mechanisms underlying such diseases. In addition, a high risk of
some rare familial forms of cancer - including about 5% of breast cancer cases - have been traced to mutations in particular genes, passed from one
generation to the next. But genetic research has not delivered the much-promised 'genetic revolution' in health - the prediction and prevention of common
diseases in most people - or an explanation of intelligence, criminality, heart disease or schizophrenia.
14 What more and more research has shown is that the underlying assumptions of eugenics - that some people are born genetically superior to others - are
simply wrong. For example, the growing global epidemic of obesity is caused by overeating and lack of exercise, not by an increase in 'genes for obesity'. Of
more than 600 obesity genes that have been identified, only a handful have been relevant to just a small number of families with children who are unusually
obese. This relative unimportance of genetic factors limits the potential of human genetic engineering to improve our quality of life. Even for those relatively
rare conditions known as genetic disorders, the genetic mutation does not determine a person's quality of life or their other attributes and value as a human
being.
20 Genetic research can sometimes help to find new treatments for disease, and today's experimental gene therapy (known as 'somatic gene therapy') may
one day become safe enough to treat some people with serious conditions - but this is not the same as altering the genetic make-up that an individual passes
on to their children and their grandchildren.
23 Changing genetic make-up (known as 'germline gene therapy') would involve enormous risks, experimenting on mothers and unborn babies, and would
have unpredictable biological consequences which are passed to future generations. As most conditions are affected by many complex interactions between
our biology and our environment, there is also likely to be little benefit to this approach.
26 Genetic enhancement is a dangerous fantasy, which distracts us from the real issues affecting our quality of life. According to the United Nations, poverty
is still the world's biggest killer. A billion people are suffering from malnutrition and another billion are threatening their health by eating too much saturated
fat and sugar. Many of the latter are also poor people, living in cities in developing countries, or on our own housing estates. Genetic engineering isn't going
to help them - tackling the global fast food industry, agricultural subsidies and other social and environmental factors might.
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199. What did the genetic adjustment do to the salmon? 200. It can be inferred from lines 16-19 of Passage A that the process is
taking longer than it should because of __________.
a. It accelerated growth.
b. It made the salmon disease-proof. a. Public protests on the issue
c. It made salmon breeding in warm water possible. b. Political opposition
d. It increased the average salmon size and weight fourfold. c. Lack of investors
d. Movement of researchers to foreign countries
201. What is the example given of researchers moving to foreign countries to 202. Why does the author of Passage A give emphasis to the last part of line
do their work? 32 shown below?
a. China, India and Argentina have hired fresh graduates from “…-And perhaps ourselves.”
American Universities.
b. Some American researchers stopped doing research. a. To underline the importance of developing Bio Engineering
c. European anti-Biotech groups hired researchers to do work against technology.
Bio Engineering in Switzerland. b. To invoke a sense of urgency in the reader.
d. Scientists from the University of California moved to do their work c. To destroy the confidence of readers in the government.
in Brazil. d. To link the dangers of Bio Engineering to humans.
203. Who came up with the term eugenics found in line 3 of passage B? 204. What is the main premise of the science of eugenics?
a. Helen Wallace a. That humans with inferior genes should be isolated in islands
b. France Galton b. That life is largely determined by genes and inherited traits
c. Emily Anthes c. That intelligence and health can never be inherited
d. Lloyd Dalton d. That genetics is only a very minor cause of social ills
205. How does the author of Passage B refute the belief of the followers of 206. What is the main idea of Passage B?
eugenics?
a. Genetic Engineering is dangerous for the environment.
a. By flatly dismissing it as insufficiently researched b. Genetic Engineering is not the solution to the world’s problems
b. By giving examples of “abnormal” people who succeeded c. The fast food industry and the environment are the major issues of
c. By presenting Genetic Engineering as a viable solution the day.
d. By explaining how a person’s lifestyle, not genetics, has a bigger d. Eugenics is a dangerous science that should be suppressed.
effect on his quality of life.
207. Which of the following is the main difference between Passage A and B? 208. Both authors would agree that Genetic Engineering is ____.
PASSAGE 5: Taken from Sam Dillon of the New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/04/education/04colleges.html
34
211. According to the passage, Harvard College has an acceptance rate of 212. What does the phrase “a dime a dozen,” used to describe valedictorian
____%. applicants in line 3, most nearly mean?
a. 8 a. Hard to find
b. 5 b. Common
c. 3 c. In high demand
d. 9 d. Cheap
213. Why were parents shocked by the results of the previous admissions 214. Which of the following is not mentioned as a contributing factor to the
cycle? low acceptance rates in the top colleges?
a. Extraordinarily talented kids were getting rejected by colleges a. Multiple applications per student
b. There were too many applicants to the colleges b. The high number of high school graduates
c. Acceptance rates were brutally low c. More students are enrolling in college right after high school
d. Perfect SAT scores were no longer enough d. Super-students with high test scores, stellar grades and
outstanding activities have become more common.
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217. What would be an appropriate title for the passage? 218. What is the author’s purpose for writing this passage?
219. What does Mr. Statt’s statement in line 43 regarding college 220. What is the main idea of the passage?
admissions imply?
a. The Ivy League admissions process is ridiculously
a. Students have it easier these days. outdated.
b. Amherst decreased its number of enrollees this year. b. Admission to America’s top colleges has become fiercely
competitive.
c. Colleges everywhere have raised the bar for admissions
significantly. c. Top schools should accept more students to help stymie
the intense competition for limited slots.
d. Admission to college was less competitive before.
d. Extraordinary students with stellar grades, test scores and
activities should prepare for eventual rejection.
Remembering Kurosawa
1 Not that he himself wanted to be remembered. Rather, he wanted his work to be remembered. He once wrote: “Take ‘myself,’ subtract ‘movies,’ and the
result is ‘zero.’” It was as though he thought he did not exist except through his movies. When I was writing my book about him, he sometimes complained
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b. He was flattered by the title. b. He wanted to show how artists were obsessed over the
emotions and feelings that their works invoke.
c. It will help him become remembered by the future
generations of the world, which was his objective. c. Artists were impractical, and thus discussed only mundane
concerns.
d. He did not believe that he could be written or talked about
without his films, because his life was only about his films. d. He wanted it to complement with the discussion on theory
by critics.
223. Kurosawa had the castle from which film dismantled because it 224. Why did Kurosawa gain the title of “Tenno?”
was used nails?
a. Because he made only ten films in his life as a matter of principle.
a. Rashomon
b. Because of his destructive nature in and out of work.
b. Throne of Blood
c. Because of his dictatorial style as director.
c. Kagemusha
d. Because of the fame he garnered in Japan and abroad.
d. Sugata
225. What did Kurosawa do when he realized that local organizations and 226. What did the event in lines 33-36 show about Kurosawa?
companies would not fund his films?
a. Kurosawa was still obsessed over minor details in his later years.
a. He gave up and focused on less expensive films, and was thus able
to continue his work. b. The Soviets from Mosfilm had an easy time negotiating, since
Kurosawa was desperate for funding.
b. He immigrated to America to gain funding.
c. Kurosawa had another side to his strict and dictatorial nature.
c. He made detailed storyboards of his unmade films and looked for
funding abroad. d. Age had tempered Kurosawa’s attitude.
d. He quit filmmaking for the rest of his life, and focused on taking
care of his grandchildren and negotiating film contracts instead.
227. What do lines 38-39 imply about Kurosawa? 228. What does the word vindication, mentioned in line 45, mean for
Kurosawa?
a. He was not popular among Japanese filmmakers.
a. It gave him approval to make even more films after rejection by
b. His reputation was tarnished by his collaboration with Mosfilm. Japanese producers.
c. Oshima had a personal grudge against Kurosawa because he fired b. It affirmed the influence and greatness of his films, after the
him when he was just beginning in the industry. doubts cast over him by his countrymen.
d. Kurosawa was never seen as a sensei by anybody before or after the c. It let him retire peacefully and return life he had before
meeting. filmmaking.
a. Kurosawa was still obsessed over his reputation. a. Life was, in Kurosawa’s point of view, only about the past.
b. Kurosawa had created his newest films to cement his legacy. b. To contrast with the perception that he was “summing up”
Kurosawa’s life
c. Kurosawa was about to die, and intended to pass on his experience
to a successor. c. To point out a common misconception among scholars of
Kurosawa
d. Kurosawa was always more concerned about imparting lessons to
future generations d. Kurosawa will always remain a mysterious figure whom we may
never know well enough.
PASSAGE 7: An excerpt from Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen. http://www.theloiterer.org/ashton/year00/passion3.html
38
231. The phrase “If you will thank me” in line 1 indicates that _______. 232. What does the word “inducements” in line 2 most nearly mean? a.
233. What does the phrase “I believe I thought only of you,” in line 2 mean? 234. Why was Elizabeth embarrassed by Darcy’s remarks?
a. Mr. Darcy did not care at all for Elizabeth’s family. a. She was flattered and shocked by his unexpected remarks.
b. Mr. Darcy did it out of his affection for Elizabeth. b. Darcy was making her family look helpless.
c. Mr. Darcy was an obsessive and mad person. c. Darcy was being rude to Elizabeth
d. Mr. Darcy only wanted to return a favor to Elizabeth for her help. d. Elizabeth felt that Darcy was trying to embarrass her again.
235. What does the word “trifle’ mentioned in line 3 most nearly mean? 236. What did Darcy wish to express in lines 3-5?
a. To eat a. That if Elizabeth still dislikes him, she only needs to say so, then
he will leave her life.
b. To dabble
b. That he is willing to make peace, even if they hated each other
c. To squander before.
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c. Pride c. Darcy still showed his contempt through his body language.
239. What does the world “alluded” in line 6 most nearly mean? 240. Line 11 shows that _______.
a. Referenced a. They did not mind each other because of the awkwardness that
came about.
b. Withheld
b. They were in love, and could not mind anything else.
c. Remembered
c. They were expressing resentment, and so did not talk much.
d. Neglect
d. Although they admitted that they liked each other, they could not
actually converse with each other properly.
241. What is the pit being referred 242. In lines 3-4, the author
to in line 2? expresses his ___________.
40
245. Lines 7-8would most likely 246. What lies in the “beyond”
convey an image of ________. being referred to in line 9?
STOP
--End of Section--
Do not turn to any other section
Section 7
Abstract Reasoning
-- – --
__ items; __ minutes
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Section 8
Numerical Ability
251-275
25 items; 15 minutes
42
a. 0 and 6 a. 92
b. 24 b. 82
c. 4 c. 84
d. 3 d. 78
253. What is the probability of getting a perfect score in 3 items 254. A rocket travels at a speed of 3 miles per second. How far
of a test that have 5 choices per item? would it have traveled at constant speed if the rocket was
traveling for 1 hour?
a. 125
a. 10,800 miles
3 b. 5,400 miles
b.
15 c. 3,600 miles
1/
64
1
d.
125
255. Gabriel is 3 years younger than Frank at the moment. 256. Chris can finish painting a wall in 6 hours. Gretchen can
When their ages are doubled, Frank is 6 years older than finish painting the same wall twice as fast as Chris does.
Gabriel. Finally, the current total of their ages right now is How quickly can they finish painting the wall together?
17. Which of the following could be Gabriel’s age right
now? a. 3 hours
d. 20 years old
257. The Ateneo has 18,000 applicants every year. Only 25% of 258. A chemist wants to mix a 5% alcohol solution with a 10%
these applicants will be accepted into the college and only alcohol solution to make an 8% solution If there are 3 liters
the top 10% of the accepted students can take honors of the 10% solution, around how many liters of the 5%
courses in the School of Management. How many students solution does he need to get an 8% solution?
can take honors courses in the School of Management?
a. 4.6 liters
a. 520
b. 6 liters
b. 450
c. 2 liters
c. 1000
d. 10.3 liters
d. 840
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259. Rachel saved 100,000 pesos in a bank that has an interest rate of 260. 10 students in section A play Ultimate while 14 play basketball. If 4
5% per annum. Around how much money will she have in 5 years of the students who play Ultimate play basketball too, how many
if the amount earned from the interest is deposited with the students play basketball only?
original amount?
a. 3
a. 121,530 pesos
b. 13
b. 127,627 pesos
c. 10
c. 105,000 pesos
d. 7
d. 1115, 762 pesos
261. What is the median of this set of numbers? 262. A basketball team is behind by 40 points at the start of the 4th
quarter. If the opponent does not score at all in the fourth quarter,
{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6} what is the average number of points the team needs to score per
30 seconds if the game should be tied by the 10th minute?
a. 3
a. 4 points
b. 4
b. 2 points
c. 7
c. 13 points
d. 3.5
d. 5 points
263. What is the probability of getting a sum of 12 after rolling a dice 264. City A is 10,000 miles away from City B. If a plane travels at an
twice? average speed of 200 miles per hour, how long will it take for it to
travel from City A to City B?
a. 1/36
a. 20 hours
b. 1/12
b. 5 hours
c. 1/6
c. 50 hours
d. 1/4
d. 45 hours
265. Justin can finish cleaning the garage in 5 hours. Bella can finish 266. In a small village of 12,000 people, 20% of all residents have been
cleaning the same garage in 10 hours. They worked together for vaccinated for the flu. If the village leader wants to increase this
percentage to 40%, how many more people will need to be
two hours, then Bella left to do some errands, leaving Justin to
vaccinated?
finish the work. How long did it take in total to clean the garage?
a. 2.5 hours a. 4,800
b. 3 hours b. 2,000
c. 4 hours c. 2,400
d. 5 hours d. 3,400
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269. A pair of shoes costs 5,000 pesos. It was initially being sold at a 270. Kim has 400 pesos worth of 20 peso and 50 peso bills. If two more
20% discount, but an additional 15% was decreased from the than two times the amount of the 50 peso bills is equal to the
discounted price. What is the price of the pair of shoes? amount of 20 peso bills, what is the value of the 50 peso bills she
has?
a. 3400 pesos
a. 250
b. 3600 pesos
b. 300
c. 4000 pesos
c. 200
d. 3200 pesos
d. 100
271. A boat in a river travels upstream at a rate of 10 km/h and 272. If John’s password has twenty-eight letters, how many possible
upstream at a rate of 14 km/h. What is the speed of the river’s passwords are there?
current?
a. 28!
a. 1 km/h
b. 27!
b. 3 km/h
c. 5!
c. 4 km/h
d. 2 km/h d. 2828
273. If 10 cows can produce 20 liters of milk per week, how long will it 274. How many games are played in a season if there are 10 teams and
take 2 cows to make the same amount? each team plays another team only once?
a. 3 weeks a. 10!
b. 2 weeks b. 20
c. 5 weeks c. 30
d. 4 weeks d. 45
275. What is the probability that 2 coins tossed at the same time will
yield two tails?
a. ½
b. ¼
c. 1/8
d. 1/10
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46