Reading Comprehension Practice - : Click For Answers
Reading Comprehension Practice - : Click For Answers
Reading Comprehension Practice - : Click For Answers
Part 1
B Y O N L I N E E L E A R N O N F E B R U A RY 1 6 , 2 0 1 8
Directions: In this test you will read several passages. Answer all the questions that follow by
encircling the correct answer.
Passage A
1. One reason that so many people fail is that they lack confidence in themselves. If you
think of yourself as being unworthy of great achievement, you will never achieve greatness. If,
on the other hand, you know yourself and understand what your abilities are, and if then you are
determined to accomplish and gain confidence in yourself.
2. One of the surest ways to accomplish this is for you to associate with persons who have
really achieved greatness. It is impossible, however, for most people to come frequently into the
actual presence of the great. The next best thing, perhaps, is for you to spend part of your time in
reading about great achievers. Biography is a powerful stimulant to action.
3. But these processes will not work unless you rid yourself of a sense of inferiority and
determined to do the best that you possibly can. One of the great philosophers expressed the idea
in a single sentence when he said that each individual should hitch his wagon to a star.
QUESTIONS:
3. What word is synonymous or closest in meaning to the word “hitch” as used in the last
sentence of the selection?
5. What does the saying “Each individual should hitch his wagon to a star” mean?
d. One should wish upon a star to make his dreams come true.
6. What literary technique was used by the writer in presenting his ideas?
7. According to the author, what is one of the surest ways to achieve self-confidence?
c. Reading the biographies of great people is essential for one to become successful
Directions: In this test you will read several passages. Answer all the questions that follow by
encircling the correct answer.
Answers
Passage B
1. Asia’s new generation of kids has more than just youth in common. Whether in Manila,
Hongkong, Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, Jakarta or Tokyo, whether rich or poor, urban or rural,
delinquent or not, Asia’s youngsters share many things. They go to schools, sing-along bars, fast
food outlets, rock concert and rallies. They are dressed in wild costumes of screaming colors or
black, leather jackets, outsize t-shirts and candy-colored sneakers.
2. In Manila, they are particularly called “bagets”. Their pursuits, though seemingly inane
are innocent – singing-along with the gang at the malls, sharing cheeseburgers and sodas or
cruising the commercial center of Cubao and Makati.
3. In Bangkok, they will wander about the Siam Shopping Center, in Singapore, in the
shopping complexes of Orchard Road. They are kids of Asia’s great cities, avant-garde,
rebellious, modernized. They are exposed to imported television that usher in international
values.
4. In Hongkong, the kids have been described as precocious, world-wise, and materialistic,
governed less by teachers and parents than by the omnipresent television. Peer group influence is
great. Their trademarks are smoking, foul language, bizarre and attention-getting appearance, and
rude mannerisms.
5. In Japan, they look like different race to the old generation. There is rising drug abuse,
sexual freedom, crime and homosexuality among the youth. There’s less respect given to parents
and to the aged.
QUESTIONS:
11. What is worth observing and good about the youth beneath the modern image and
westernized lifestyle?
12. When the author said that Asian youth are avant-garde, it means that they
c. Discipline at home has nothing to do with the character of the youth today.
d. Character is hereditary, the environment has nothing to do with what was become of the youth
today.
14. If the youth are exposed to too much western television they will likely
15. What literary technique was used by the author in writing the selection?
Directions: In this test you will read several passages. Answer all the questions that follow by
encircling the correct answer.
Answers
Passage C
1.
1. In the year 1799, an officer of the French Army was stationed in a small fortress
on the Rosetta River, a mouth of the Nile, near Alexander, Egypt. He was interested in the ruins
of the ancient Egyptian civilization, and had seen the sphinx and the pyramids, those mysterious
structures that were erected by men of another era.
2. One day, as a trench was being dug, he found a piece of black slate on which
letters had been carved. He had studied Greek in school, and knew this was an inscription written
in that language. There were two more lines carved into the stone: one on the Egyptian characters
he had seen on the ruins , the other in completely unfamiliar characters.
3. The officer realized the importance of such a find, and relinquished it to scholars
who had been puzzling over Egyptian inscriptions.
4. In 1802, a french professor by the name of Champollion began studying the stone
in an attempt to decipher the two unknown sets of characters using the Greek letters as a key. He
worked with the stone for over twenty years, and in 1823, announced that he had discovered the
meaning of the fourteen signs, and in doing so, had unlocked the secret of ancient Egyptian
writing.
5. Some 5000 years after an unknown person had made those three inscriptions, the
Rosetta Stone became a key, unlocking the written records of Egypt and sharing the history of
that civilization with the rest of the world.
QUESTIONS:
1. What is the main idea of the selection?
c. The discovery of the Rosetta Stone led to a better understanding of the history of Egypt.
d. A French Army officer studied the Rosetta Stone and the inscriptions carved into it.
1. What word would best describe ancient Egyptians based on the selection?
1. What might have happened if the Rosetta Stone were not found?
b. Ancient Egypt would have not reached the peak of its glory.
d. Egyptian civilization would have not been fully understood by the modern world.
b. The Egyptians scholars were puzzled by the inscriptions found in the Rosetta Stone.
c. The founder of the Rosetta Stone knew of its value and turned it over to the proper authorities.
d. The officer did not think the Rosetta Stone had much value and therefore gave it away.
1. What literary technique was used by the writer in developing the passage?
Directions: In this test you will read several passages. Answer all the questions that follow by
encircling the correct answer.
Answers
Passage D
1.
1. The complacent Filipino majority may not have been awakened yet to the reality
of a ravaged environment; nonetheless, the evidence must be overemphasized. Automotive
vehicles for one, reportedly contribute 94.6 million tons of waste released into the air each year,
a commuter can only imagine how polluted the air that gets into his respiratory system is.
2. Pollution experts are inclined to single out man as the culprit of his own
destruction. Man, rightly referred to as a “messy animal,” has helped being about untold
environmental decay.
3. Imperiled by the pollution of air, water and land are not only human lives. The
marine species as well as the flora and fauna are just adversely affected. Mass suicides of fishes
and whales have been witnessed along Australian and American shorelines.
4. The mushrooming of factories and plants along river banks have been largely
responsible for the pollution of the different bodies of water, indiscriminate disposal of industrial
waste makes festering sinks of the rivers. Too much dumping of industrial waste renders to water
stagnant. Many of the rivers that used to flow along industrial banks can use some dredging. And
yet what good will dredging of a river do if in no time at all it will serve again as dumping basin?
The initiative has to come from the factory owners.
5. A great number of scientists like or think that new technology can be called upon
to check the impending pollution disaster, others are of the opinion that fewer births and less
gadgetry may yet provide the answer to the devastating dilemma. It cannot be denied, however,
that man’s wasteful ways call for some measure of discipline.
6. Man’s brutality toward his environment will only lead to his unmarking. It is
ironical, indeed, that he who was created to have dominion over every living creature on earth
should one day be overpowered by an environment he has helped to pollute. The catastrophe can
hopefully still be averted.
QUESTIONS:
24. The phrase “mushrooming of factories” are used in the fourth paragraph of the selection
refers to factories which are
25. In what part of the passage can you read of the ways we can prevent pollution?
26. Who is referred to in the phrase “a messy animal” in the second paragraph of the passage?
28. What would be the likely outcome if we continue polluting our environment?
a. Man will be destroyed by an environment he had polluted.
b. Less births and less gadgetry will save the world from catastrophe .
d. Man’s wasteful ways will contribute more to the pollution of the environment.
29. Which of the following statements show a cause and effect relationship?
c. The marine species and the flora and fauna are adversely affected.
d. Mass suicide of fishes and whales have been seen along coastlines.