欢迎来到慕课网

LSAT 考试|LSAT考试试题TEST2-1c

来源:www.huiyumi.com 2024-12-21
15. A well-known sports figure found that combining publicity1 tours with playing tours led to problems, so she sTOPped combining the two. She no longer allows bookstore appearances and playing in competition to occur in the same city within the same trip. This week she is traveling to London to play in a major competition, so during her stay in London she will not be making any publicity appearances at any bookstore in London.

Which one of the following most closely parallels the reasoning used in the passage?

(A) Wherever there is an Acme2 Bugkiller, many wasps3 are killed. The Z family garden has an Acme Bugkiller, so any wasps remaining in the garden will soon be killed.

(B) The only times that the hospital's emergency room staff attends to relatively4 less serious emergencies are times when there is no critical emergency to attend to. On Monday night the emergency room staff attended to a series of fairly minor5 emergencies, so there must not have been any critical emergencies to take care of at the time.

(C) Tomato plants require hot summers to thrive. Farms in the cool summers of country Y probably do not have thriving tomato plants.

(D) Higher grades lead to better job opportunities, and studying leads to higher grades. Therefore, studying will lead to better job opportunities.

(E) Butter knives are not sharp. Q was not murdered with a sharp blade, so suspect X's butter knife may have been the murder weapon.

Questions 16-17

The advanced technology of ski boots and bindings has brought a dramatic drop in the incidence of injuries that occur on the slopes of ski resorts: from 9 injuries per 1,000 skiers in 1950 to 3 in 1980. As a result, the remainder of ski-related injuries, which includes all injuries occurring on the premises7 of a ski resort but not on the slopes, rose from 10 percent of all ski-related injuries in 1950 to 25 percent in 1980. The incidence of these injuries, including accidents such as falling down steps, increases with the amount of alcohol consumed per skier6.

16. Which one of the following can be properly inferred from the passage?

(A) As the number of ski injuries that occur on the slopes decreases, the number of injuries that occur on the premises of ski resorts increases.

(B) The amount of alcohol consumed per skier increased between 1950 and 1980.

(C) The technology of ski boots and bindings affects the incidence of each type of ski-related injury.

(D) If the technology of ski boots and bindings continues to advance, the incidence of ski-related injuries will continue to decline.

(E) Injuries that occurred on the slopes of ski resorts made up a smaller percentage of ski-related injuries in 1980 than in 1950.

17. Which one of the following conflicts with information in the passage?

(A) The number of ski injuries that occurred on the slopes was greater in 1980 than in 1950.

(B) A skier was less likely to be injured on the slopes in 1950 than in 1980.

(C) The reporting of ski injuries became more accurate between 1950 and 1980.

(D) The total number of skiers dropped between 1950 and 1980.

(E) Some ski-related injuries occurred in 1980 to people who were not skiing.

18. Learning how to build a nest plays an important part in the breeding success of birds. For example, Dr. Snow has recorded the success of a number of blackbirds in several successive years. He finds that birds nesting for the first time are less successful in breeding than are older birds, and also less successful than they themselves are a year later. This cannot be a mere8 matter of size and strength, since blackbirds, like the great majority of birds, are fully9 grown when they leave the nest. it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that they benefit by their nesting experience.

Which one of the following, if true, would most weaken the argument?

(A) Blackbirds build better nests than other birds.

(B) The capacity of blackbirds to lay viable10 eggs increases with each successive trial during the first few years of reproduction.

(C) The breeding success of birds nesting for the second time is greater than that of birds nesting for the first time.

(D) Smaller and weaker blackbirds breed just as successfully as bigger and stronger blackbirds.

(E) Up to 25 percent of all birds are killed by predators11 before they start to nest.

19. How do the airlines expect to prevent commercial plane crashes? Studies have shown that pilot error contributes to two-thirds of all such crashes. To address this problem, the airlines have upgraded their training programs by increasing the hours of classroom instruction and emphasizing communication skills in the cockpit. But it is unrealistic to expect such measures to compensate12 for pilots' lack of actual flying time. Therefore, the airlines should rethink their training approach to reducing commercial crashes.

Which one of the following is an assumption upon which the argument depends?

(A) Training programs can eliminate pilot errors.

(B) Commercial pilots routinely undergo additional training throughout their careers.

(C) The number of airline crashes will decrease if pilot training programs focus on increasing actual flying time.

(D) Lack of actual flying time is an important contributor to pilot error in commercial plane crashes.

(E) Communication skills are not important to pilot training programs.

20. All savings13 accounts are interest-bearing accounts. The interest from some interest-bearing accounts is tax-free., so there must be some savings accounts that have tax-free interest.

Which one of the following arguments is flawed in a way most similar to the way in which the passage is flawed?

(A) All artists are intellectuals. Some great photographers are artists. Therefore, some great photographers must be intellectuals.

(B) All great photographers are artists. All artists are intellectuals. Therefore, some great photographers must be intellectuals.

(C) All great photographers are artists. Some artists are intellectuals. therefore, some great photographers are intellectuals.

(D) All great photographers are artists. Some great photographers are intellectuals. Therefore, some artists must be intellectuals.

(E) All great photographers are artists. No artists are intellectuals. Therefore, some great photographers must not be intellectuals.


相关文章推荐

02

02

LSAT 考试|美国律师(LSAT)考试后经验的介绍b

BARBRI复习提纲有十本书。每本都特大特厚,几百页到千来页不等。

12

21

LSAT 考试|LSAT考试试题TEST2-2d

20. Normal full-term babies are all born with certain instinctive1 reflexes that disappear by the age of two months. Bec

11

02

LSAT 考试|LSAT模拟考试:LSAT模拟考试TEST2阅

SECTION ITime-35 minutes28 QuestionsDirections: Each passage in this section is followed by a group of questions to be a

11

02

LSAT 考试|LSAT模拟考试:LSAT模拟考试TEST2阅

Historians generally agree that, of the great modern innovations, the railroad had the most far-reaching impact on major

09

15

LSAT 考试|法学院入学考试全真考试试题测试(一

SECTION 1 Time-35 minutes 23 Questions Directions: Each group of questions in this section is based on a set of conditio

08

13

LSAT 考试|LSAT考试全真考试试题五SECTION2(4)

Questions 18-19Dillworth: More and more people are deciding not to have children because of the personal and economic sa

07

28

LSAT 考试|LSAT考试全真考试试题四SECTION3(5)

21. The amount of electricity consumed in Millville on any day in August is directly proportional to peak humidity on th

06

14

LSAT 考试|LSAT考试全考试真题二SECTION2(4)

16. Researchers in South Australia estimate changes in shark populations inhabiting local waters by monitoring what is t

06

14

LSAT 考试|LSAT考试全考试真题二SECTION4(4)

16.The passage provides support for all of the following generalizations1 about large interactive2 systems EXCEPT: They

05

02

LSAT 考试|LSAT关于逻辑单题的办法总结(4)

答案: 问题:下面哪一个,if true,最可以讲解上面明显的矛盾? 读题:在Plains Country的Business Permit Office宣称:通过用邮寄过来的计算机可读 的表格代替老式的、在申请者Interview的那天填写