Ok 936860629 Ok 11 Yds Mart 2019
Ok 936860629 Ok 11 Yds Mart 2019
Ok 936860629 Ok 11 Yds Mart 2019
MART
2019
YDS MART 2019
1-6: For these questions, choose the best word or 4. The foundations of international law as it is
expression to fill the space. understood today lie ---- in the development of
Western culture and political organisation.
A) firmly B) instantly
1. Like the rest of the animal kingdom, mammals need
food for energy and the ---- of bodily processes C) adequately D) eligibly
such as growth and reproduction. E) convertibly
A) suspension B) deterioration
C) maintenance D) elaboration
E) persistence
2. With rapid advancements in technology, there are 5. There is a link between sunlight and the chemical
new ---- already seen in countries such as Myanmar serotonin, which ---- our mood and is important in
and Sri Lanka where social media apps have been reducing anxiety disorders.
instrumental in spreading fake news and violence.
A) initiates B) detects
A) measures B) adjustments
C) reveals D) hinders
C) incentives D) threats
E) boosts
E) obligations
E) unprecedented
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7-16: For these questions, choose the best word(s) 9. Humanity's extraordinary success ---- due to our
or expression(s) to fill the space(s). ingenuity in devising cultural means ---- our
physical limitations.
A) from / at B) to / on
E) among / for
A) should have gone / must have enjoyed 11. Weather is defined as the state of the
B) may go / were able to enjoy atmosphere ---- a given location and ---- a
relatively short period of time.
C) had to go / could enjoy
A) along / on B) towards / in
D) used to go / may have enjoyed
C) at / over D) from / against
E) would go / ought to have enjoyed
E) for / about
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12. Renaissance art evolved from common set of 15. Music is a very small word to encompass
principles, ---- it took many directions and changed something that takes ---- many forms ---- there are
considerably in the following centuries. cultural and subcultural identities.
13. ---- palaeontologists still like to argue about what 16. Although genetically modified seed is more
role the asteroid played in the dinosaur extinction, expensive than conventional equivalents, the extra
there really is not much of a mystery left. cost can be seen as an insurance policy against
crop losses ---- weeds or pests.
A) Once B) In case
A) contrary to B) due to
C) Given that D) Although
C) in terms of D) despite
E) As
E) along with
A) so B) even if
C) while D) yet
E) as
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C) conversely D) instead
Today the deadly poliomyelitis virus is only endemic to four E) otherwise
countries —Afghanistan, India, Nigeria, and Pakistan. This
is (17) ---- the groundbreaking research undertaken by
doctor and biologist Jonas Salk. In 1947, at the University of
Pittsburgh, Salk combined his work on the influenza vaccine
with his search for a vaccine to protect (18) ----
poliomyelitis. The virus was deadly in 5 to 10 percent of
cases where patients became paralysed, and (19) ---- were
unable to breathe. Medical opinion at the time held that only
a live virus (20) ---- total immunity, but Salk disproved this.
In 1952, he used formaldehyde, a gas with a strong smell,
to inactivate the poliomyelitis virus and developed a vaccine
still capable of triggering an immune response in a host.
Initially tested on monkeys, then human patients, Salk's
success (21) ---- him to test it on himself, his family, his
staff, and other volunteers.
20.
A) had to prompt
E) along with
21.
18.
A) oppressed B) neglected
A) on B) with
C) prohibited D) convinced
C) for D) over
E) deterred
E) against
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B) were developing
The snake is one of the most emblematic creatures in C) had developed
human mythology, and is perceived to represent both
wisdom and evil. Indian mythology considers snakes to be D) would develop
the 'bringers of life', (22) ---- the Bible tells the story of a E) are developing
snake as the first deceiver. Snakes' most (23) ----
characteristic is their lack of limbs, so they move with a
slithering motion. As they hunt other animals, they (24) ----
a keen sense of smell and the ability to sense vibrations
and temperature variations. To kill their prey, venomous
snakes use their long and sharp teeth to inject paralysing or
deadly nerve venom (25) ---- their specialised salivary
glands, where the venom is stored. They can unhinge their
jaws to swallow large prey. (26) ---- growing continuously,
snakes shed their skin by detaching the outermost layer.
25.
A) for B) over
C) from D) on
E) to
22.
A) once B) while
C) otherwise D) therefore
E) because
26.
23.
A) Except for B) Similar to
A) sceptical B) tolerable
C) With the help of D) In spite of
C) variable D) prominent
E) As a result of
E) misleading
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YDS MART 2019
27-36: For these questions, choose the best option 29. ----, the diseases which were also brought posed
to complete the given sentence. serious challenges to their way of life.
E) some companies are marketing special glasses that 30. Although many people equate creativity with
protect our eyes from the blue light intelligence, ----.
B) for centuries, ice and water had been manipulated 31. Since virtually all cultures on earth have some form
to cool air circulating in theatres, hospitals, and of fortune-telling, ----.
factories A) most people are no longer curious about what their
future will bring to them
C) air conditioning began to be marketed as a comfort
device for domestic consumption during the 1930s B) it is an incomprehensible temptation to get
information about what awaits us in the future
D) the development of industrial air conditioning
dominated the newly created industry at the C) it would be somewhat undesirable for a person to
beginning of the 20th century know what is ahead in the future
E) technologies were being developed in the D) the desire to predict what will happen in the future
refrigeration industry contemporaneously with can be a permanent feature of the human mind
Carrier's work in humidification
E) it is considered to be a science by some, whereas
others claim that it is nothing more than speculation
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YDS MART 2019
32. Most people have experienced foodborne illness 34. In our rapidly changing world, parents' skills may
----. easily become obsolete, ----.
A) given that those working in the field of food safety A) though children sometimes look to their peers
are most concerned about microbial foodborne rather than their parents for guidance and approval
illness
B) as family-centred learning plays a key role in
B) because ensuring the safety of food is a shared equipping children with social, cultural and moral
responsibility among producers, industry, values
government, and consumers
C) while they might have difficulty in transmitting their
C) although current estimates of foodborne illness in accumulated knowledge to their children
the United States are 325,000 hospitalisations, and
D) but their children's taste in diet, music, clothes and
around 5,000 deaths per year
entertainment can significantly differ from their own
D) even though they might not recognise it as such, taste
instead blaming it on the stomach flu or a 24-hour
E) so they could have fewer opportunities for direct
bug
influence over their children's development
E) when a person consciously thinks about food safety
before, during or after eating a meal
35. Hydroelectricity plants pose several threats to the
environment ----.
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YDS MART 2019
37-42: For these questions, choose the most 39. Every child has an individual learning style, and they
accurate Turkish translation of the sentences in learn information best when it is delivered in a mode
English, and the most accurate English translation suited to their style.
of the sentences in Turkish.
A) Her çocuk kendine özgü bir öğrenme şekline sahiptir
ve çocuklar bilgiyi en iyi kendi tarzlarına uygun bir
37. The Morse code, which is a milestone in long-range biçimde verildiğinde öğrenir.
communication, was designed so that telegraph
operators could communicate via electrical signals. B) Kendine özgü öğrenme şekliyle her çocuk, bilgiyi en
iyi kendi tarzına uygun bir biçimde verildiğinde
A) Uzun mesafe iletişimde bir dönüm noktası olan Mors
öğrenir.
alfabesi, telgraf operatörlerinin elektrik sinyalleri
kurabilmeleri için tasarlanmıştır. C) Kendine özgü bir öğrenme şekli olan her çocuk,
B) Uzun mesafe iletişimde bir dönüm noktası olsa da öğrenme tarzına uygun verildiği takdirde bilgiyi en iyi
Mors alfabesi ilk olarak telgraf operatörlerinin elektrik şekilde öğrenir.
sinyalleri yoluyla haberleşmeleri için tasarlanmıştır.
D) Her çocuk kendine özgü bir öğrenme şekline sahip
C) Telgraf operatörlerinin elektrik sinyalleri aracılığıyla olduğu için bilgiyi en iyi kendi tarzına uygun bir
iletişim kurması için tasarlanması, Mors alfabesini biçimde verildiğinde öğrenir.
uzun mesafe iletişimde bir dönüm noktası haline
getirmiştir. E) Her çocuk kendine özgü bir öğrenme şekline sahiptir
ve onlar için bilgiyi öğrenmenin en iyi yolu, kendi
D) Elektrik sinyalleri aracılığıyla telgraf operatörlerinin
tarzlarına uygun olanıdır.
iletişim kurması için tasarlanan Mors alfabesi, uzun
mesafe iletişimin dönüm noktasıdır.
E) Uzun mesafe iletişimde bir dönüm noktası olan Mors
alfabesinin tasarlanma sebebi, telgraf operatörlerinin
elektrik sinyalleriyle iletişim kurabilmelerini
sağlamaktı.
40. Gen terapisi çoğunlukla ender genetik bozuklukların
tedavisinde faydalıdır; bunun aksine, mevcut
38. Solving a series of incredibly difficult problems, the genlerin değiştirilmesini kapsayan gen düzeltme,
Wright brothers created a revolutionary new çok daha fazla hastalığı tedavi eder.
technology that changed the world in a way that even
they could not imagine. A) Gene therapy is mainly useful for treating rare
genetic disorders, whereas gene-editing involves
A) Wright kardeşler, kendilerinin bile hayal edemeyeceği
altering existing genes and treating a wider range of
bir biçimde dünyayı değiştiren, devrim niteliğinde yeni
conditions.
bir teknoloji yaratarak inanılmaz derecede zor bir dizi
problemi çözmüşlerdir. B) Gene therapy mainly treats rare genetic disorders;
B) Wright kardeşler, inanılmaz derecede zor bir dizi gene-editing, on the other hand, involves the
problemi çözmüşler ve kendilerinin bile hayal alteration of the existing genes, which is useful for
edemeyeceği bir biçimde dünyayı değiştiren, devrim treating a wider range of conditions.
niteliğinde yeni bir teknoloji yaratmışlardır.
C) Gene therapy is mainly useful for treating rare
C) Wright kardeşlerin inanılmaz derecede zor bir dizi genetic disorders; in contrast, gene-editing, which
problemi çözerek dünyayı değiştiren, devrim involves altering existing genes, treats a much
niteliğinde yeni bir teknoloji yaratmaları, kendilerinin
wider range of conditions.
bile hayal edemeyeceği bir şeydi.
D) Wright kardeşlerin kendilerinin bile hayal D) Gene therapy is mainly used for the treatment of
edemeyeceği bir biçimde dünyayı değiştiren, devrim rare genetic disorders, but gene-editing can treat a
niteliğinde yeni bir teknoloji yaratmak için yaptıkları much wider range of disorders since it involves
şey, inanılmaz derecede zor bir dizi problemi altering existing genes.
çözmekti.
E) Gene therapy is mainly used to treat rare genetic
E) Wright kardeşler, inanılmaz derecede zor bir dizi disorders while gene-editing, which is the alteration
problemi çözerek kendilerinin bile hayal edemeyeceği of the existing genes, is involved in the treatment of
bir şekilde dünyayı değiştiren devrim niteliğinde yeni a wider range of conditions.
bir teknoloji yaratmışlardır.
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YDS MART 2019
41. Sağlık okuryazarlığı, bireylerin sağlık konusunda 42. Tüm vücut fonksiyonlarımızı senkronize eden iç
uygun kararlar vermek için gerekli olan temel sağlık saatimiz, ipuçlarını güneş ışığının gündüz-gece
bilgi ve hizmetlerini elde etme ve anlama döngüsünden alır ve beyin bu 24 saatlik ritmi
kapasitesine sahip olma derecesi olarak organlarımıza iletmek ve vücudumuza ne zaman
tanımlanabilir. uyumaya ve uyanmaya ihtiyaç duyduğunu bildirmek
için sinirleri ve hormonları kullanır.
A) Health literacy can be defined as the degree to
which individuals have the capacity to obtain and A) Our internal clock keeps all our body functions in
understand basic health information and services, sync by taking its cues from the day-night cycle of
and to make necessary health decisions in an sunlight, and the brain transmits this 24-hour
appropriate way. rhythm to our internal organs and tells our body
when it needs to sleep and wake by using nerves
B) Health literacy, which is required to make
and hormones.
appropriate health decisions, can be defined as the
degree to which individuals have the capacity to B) Our internal clock, which keeps all our body
obtain and understand basic health information and functions in sync, takes its cues from the day-night
services. cycle of sunlight, and the brain uses nerves and
hormones to transmit this 24-hour rhythm to our
C) Defined as the degree to which individuals have the
internal organs and to tell our body when it needs to
capacity to obtain and understand basic health
sleep and wake.
information and services, health literacy is
necessary to make appropriate health decisions. C) Our internal clock, by which all our body functions
are kept in sync, takes its cues from the day-night
D) Health literacy can be defined as the degree to
cycle of sunlight, and to transmit this 24-hour
which individuals have the capacity to obtain and
rhythm to our internal organs, the brain uses nerves
understand basic health information and services
and hormones, telling our body when it needs to
required to make appropriate health decisions.
sleep and wake.
E) The degree to which individuals have the capacity
D) All our body functions are kept in sync by our
to obtain and understand basic health information
internal clock, which takes its cues from the day-
and services needed to make health decisions
night cycle of sunlight, and the brain uses nerves
appropriately can be defined as health literacy.
and hormones to transmit this 24-hour rhythm to
our internal organs and tells our body when to sleep
and wake.
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YDS MART 2019
43-46: Answer these questions according to the 44. One can understand from the passage that our
passage below. shortcuts ----.
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YDS MART 2019
47-50: Answer these questions according to the 48. Which of the following can be inferred from the
passage below. passage about the relationship between needs and
purchases?
A) Advertisers should take into account what
Consumer psychology is the study of the behaviour of consumers need, irrespective of what they desire,
consumers of goods and services regarding their buying in order to persuade them to buy particular
patterns and reactions to advertising and marketing. It products.
seeks to explain consumer behaviour in two basic ways: B) Consumers are overwhelmed by their inner voice
what the consumer wants and what the consumer needs. telling them to buy what they need rather than what
The logical explanation for fulfilling the needs is a simple they want.
one. If a person lives in New York, that person needs a
C) Economic factors far outweigh psychological ones
winter coat to survive the cold outside. But why the person when it comes to purchases based on fundamental
buys a particular style or colour depends on the more needs.
complex issues of why a particular choice is made. The key
to unlocking consumer psychology is understanding that D) Although needs intervene in consumer purchase,
desires rule over needs when it comes to consumer they fall short in accounting for the details of the
choices consumers make.
purchase. In our modern world where new food products
and electronic gadgets emerge daily, it is in the interest of E) Advertisers should acknowledge that the battle
psychologists, as well as those marketing the products, to between desires and needs usually ends in the
understand the relationship between financial and victory of the latter.
psychological factors that make people buy what they buy.
In fact, consumer psychology utilises more than simply
psychology, because it also studies economics and culture. 49. It can be inferred from the passage that in order to
better understand consumer psychology, one
should ----.
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51-54: Answer these questions according to the 52. Which of the following is given as a feature of
passage below. broomrape?
A) They tend to use their remaining energy in an 54. What is the main idea of the passage?
attempt to access sunlight.
A) All plants need one another to store energy and
B) They are not really affected by permanent darkness produce food.
due to etiolation.
B) Plants can adapt to darkness, but none of them can
C) Even short periods of darkness cause plants to lose live forever without sunlight.
their ability to adapt.
C) The sun is the eternal source of energy for living
D) Some plants such as grass are more adaptable to beings on our planet.
darkness than others.
D) Nature has so many defects that it is difficult for us
E) They adjust to complete darkness by using up all to make up for all of them.
their energy, so they no longer need
E) Darkness makes some plant species more
photosynthesis.
susceptible to parasites.
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YDS MART 2019
55-58: Answer these questions according to the 56. Which could be inferred from the passage?
passage below.
A) Throughout Europe, 359 plant species have been
found to show the symptoms of Pierce's disease.
Some 150 years after the Great French Wine Blight, B) Although Pierce's disease affects a lot of plants in
European vines — climbing plants that produce grapes — Europe, it only develops in vines in the Americas.
are under threat from a disease that originated in the C) California has been unable to cope with the insects
Americas. A bacterium known as Xyllella fastidiosa causes that transmit X. fastidiosa, which has destroyed the
Pierce's disease, in which the plants' transport vessels wine industry.
become blocked, cutting the supply of water and nutrients
to the leaves. California's Department of Food and D) The impact of X. fastidiosa is far-reaching when the
Agriculture spends about $40 million a year to control the variety of infected plant species is considered.
leaf-hopping insects that carry the bacteria from plant to E) Southern Italy is known to be the place where
plant in that region. Without this expenditure, the annual Pierce's disease appeared for the first time.
cost to the wine industry could be up to $250 million. The
bacterium does not just hit vines — in the Americas, it also
strikes citrus and coffee plants. Now X. fastidiosa has
reached Europe, where it has earned another name — the
'Ebola of olive trees'. In 2013, it was spotted in a few olive 57. Which of the following conclusions could be drawn
trees in southern Italy, and by 2015 had infected up to a from the passage?
million trees there with what has become known as olive
A) Agricultural damage from Pierce's disease peaks in
quick decline syndrome. So far, 359 plant species in Europe
winter months across Europe.
have been identified as being vulnerable to X. fastidiosa,
including peaches, lavender and rosemary. Some show no B) Why plant species die soon after they catch
symptoms, acting as reservoirs for the bacteria. Others dry Pierce's disease has not been revealed yet.
and die quickly. Short of controlling insect species that
C) Most plant species infected with X. fastidiosa show
could spread the disease, no cure is yet known. Generally
typical symptoms of Pierce's disease.
cold winters slow the spread of Pierce's disease; however,
as the planet warms, there is every chance the disease's D) High temperatures may increase the speed at
ranges could increase. which Pierce's disease is spreading.
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YDS MART 2019
59-62: Answer these questions according to the 60. To find the world's best 100-plus sportsperson,
passage below. Lepers and his colleagues ----.
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YDS MART 2019
Johanna: Lucy:
- Yeah, he said the exact same thing. I'd never - I think you'll easily get used to working with a
thought of them as being beneficial at all. I used new team. And this change will be to your
to think they only cause aggressive behaviour advantage. You know it's much easier to set
and addiction. your limits at the beginning. If you do so, I'm
sure you'll manage your professional life more
Stan: easily.
- Well, apparently some scientists still have those A) What stops you from negotiating a better deal with
fears, but it all depends on how effectively you your current employer?
use them.
B) Until now you seemed really happy with your
A) Such as playing action video games? I remember current job. What's the problem?
reading that they help the brain and improve
cognitive skills. C) I know it's quite challenging. What's attractive about
the new offer?
B) That's really interesting. I've always thought that the
human brain couldn't grow new cells after a certain D) You've always dreamed of working in a big
age. company. Why would you let yourself miss such an
opportunity?
C) Did he say what kind of experiences? I've been
playing chess for years hoping that it'll give me a E) Do you think you've practised building appropriate
cognitive advantage at school. boundaries in your professional life?
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YDS MART 2019
- Last week, I was in a situation where things - Now, more and more experts are complaining
went from bad to worse. I failed to meet my end- about modern parenting styles. They say
of-year targets at work, the central heating parents try to create an image of success that
system in my apartment broke, and my car was has little to do with their children's desires,
hit by an unknown car. All these happened in talents or needs.
the same week!
Jill:
Sally:
- ----
- Terrible! How do you keep calm in such
Kelsey:
situations?
- Actually, this makes children less independent.
Daisy:
They always feel the need to meet their parents'
- ---- wishes and ask them what to do in their lives.
Sally: Jill:
- What do you do with that information? - So, over-parenting may prevent children from
building self-confidence and gaining the ability
Daisy:
to adapt to an unpredictable world.
- I look at the list and focus on the ones I can do
A) Parents tend to bring up their children as they were
something about. Then I think about the actions
raised in the past, but it's really difficult in this ever-
I can take, including asking for help if
changing world.
necessary.
B) I think every child has a special talent, but it may
A) I can think and worry about many things at the
remain undiscovered unless their parents help them
same time, but when I'm in the action phase, I try to
recognise themselves.
avoid that.
C) In today's world, parents are bombarded with
B) The truth is, it's hard not to lose it in these
information from books and experts, so they can't
moments. I may end up giving up because of the
often decide how to contribute to their children's
never-ending list of problems.
success.
C) I write everything down. I draw a line, and on the
D) I agree that parents should offer advice to their kids
left I put down all the problems, and on the right
about their future plans, but they shouldn't forget to
what to do about those problems.
understand their wishes too.
D) In my experience, the easiest way to keep calm is
E) That's true. They want to sculpt their kids into a
to regain control of the situation by collecting
particular kind of adult, stressing them with endless
information from as many people as possible.
schedules and heavy expectations.
E) No matter how bad things are, keeping my calm
always helps me come up with a possible solution. I
keep saying “This too shall pass”.
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67. Robert:
Leonie:
- ----
Robert:
Leonie:
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YDS MART 2019
68-71: For these questions, choose the best 69. The birthday cake tradition in the United States is
rephrased form of the given sentence. little more than a century old, but the relationship of
cakes and celebration has a much longer history.
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YDS MART 2019
70. People had long known of petroleum, but there 71. Ageing is a complicated process, involving DNA
seemed to be little commercial use until 1853 when damage, chronic inflammation, and worn-out cells,
Samuel Kier began using it to make kerosene, a but we do not yet know which of these has the
cheap substitute for the whale oil commonly used biggest impact on ageing.
in lamps.
A) The combination of DNA damage, chronic
A) The development of kerosene in 1853 by Samuel inflammation and worn-out cells affects ageing to
Kier as an economical alternative to whale oil for unknown extents, making it a complicated process.
lamps was not the first commercial use of
B) Because ageing is a complex process, the
petroleum because people had known about it for
relationship between ageing and resultant effects of
so long, but it was the most commercially
DNA damage, chronic inflammation and worn-out
successful enterprise.
cells is largely unknown.
B) Though being known for a long time, petroleum did
C) As a complex process, ageing includes DNA
not seem to be much commercial until Samuel Kier
damage, chronic inflammation and worn-out cells,
developed it into kerosene in 1853 — a cheaper
though it is not clear which affects the ageing
alternative to the whale oil commonly used in
process the most.
lamps.
D) Ageing, which itself is a complicated process,
C) Although most people had long known about the
damages DNA, causes chronic inflammation and
commercial uses of petroleum, there was little
wears out cells; however, we do not yet know which
development of the substance until 1853 when
symptom is triggered by ageing the most.
Samuel Kier started using it to make kerosene and
marketing it as a cheaper substitute for the whale E) Ageing is characterised by damaged DNA, chronic
oil commonly used in lamps. inflammation and worn-out cells, but which one of
these makes the process more complicated is yet to
D) It was in 1853 that petroleum — a substance which
be determined.
people had long known about but did not seem to
have much interest in — was used commercially for
the first time by Samuel Kier to make kerosene,
which was a more economical substitute to power
lamps than the commonly used whale oil.
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YDS MART 2019
72-75: For these questions, choose the best option 73. Braille is a tactile (touch-based) system of written
to complete the missing part of the passage. language that features patterns of raised dots to
represent letters of the alphabet, common words
and contractions, mathematical symbols, and
72. ---- Yet even today, when objective evidence is punctuation. Named after its developer, Louis
valued highly, most people would admit to secretly Braille, braille allows people who are blind to read
cherishing one, or two, or many superstitions. and, with adaptive technology, to write. ---- Learning
Across America, tens of thousands of lottery tickets each of the different forms of braille code is like
are pencilled in every day based on nothing more or learning a new language. Therefore, most people
less than people's lucky numbers. Though we now only learn the one or two of those they are most
have scientific explanations for a number of once- likely to use in their daily lives.
mysterious phenomena, daily life still holds enough A) People whose vision is still intact can also learn
unpredictability that we turn to superstitions to braille, and should if they have regular interactions
account for the implausible. with people who are blind.
A) Bad-luck superstitions still keep many people from B) There are a number of braille variations in common
walking under a ladder, opening an umbrella use in the US, including braille specific to music,
indoors, or boarding an airplane on Friday the mathematics, science, and computer programming.
thirteenth.
C) Many communities have schools and consultants
B) Scientific studies reveal that most of the who teach braille as well as libraries that provide
superstitious beliefs we inherit involve ways to braille publications.
protect ourselves from evil.
D) Nemeth braille code provides a mix of American
C) Archaeologists identify Neanderthal man, who literary braille, Nemeth braille, and unique symbols
roamed throughout Western Asia 50,000 years ago, for instruction documentation.
as having produced the first superstitious belief.
E) American literary braille code uses about 250
D) Supernatural beliefs come into being when patterns to create book-length materials using
particular events happen in a way that cannot be short-form words, contractions, and single-cell
explained by reason and are followed by words.
superstitions to help control them.
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YDS MART 2019
74. Gothic is the style of architecture and art that 75. The fossil record of dinosaurs in Africa extends
succeeded Romanesque and prevailed in Europe from the Late Triassic Period, over 200 million years
from the mid-12th century to the 16th century. Like ago, until the Late Cretaceous Period, presumably
many other stylistic labels, the word was originally 65 million years ago. However, the extinction event
a term of abuse. It was coined by Italian artists of that ended the reign of dinosaurs has yet to be
the Renaissance to denote the type of medieval documented. Throughout this length of time, Africa
architecture they condemned as barbaric. ---- None remained relatively stable geologically, changing
of these features was first used in the Gothic position only slightly by drifting and rotating
period, but when employed together they created a northward. ---- The changing geography of Africa
new type of skeletal structure and a sense of and its neighbours throughout the Mesozoic Period
graceful resilience that was very different in spirit is fundamental to understanding the dinosaur
from the massive solidity of Romanesque buildings. fossils found there.
A) The Gothic style is still characterised chiefly in A) During the Late Triassic through the Early Jurassic,
terms of architecture — in particular by the use of major continental land masses were united into the
pointed arches, rib vaults, and flying buttresses. supercontinent of Pangaea.
B) The term 'Gothic' has also been applied to the B) Late Triassic dinosaur sites are found extensively in
ornament, sculpture, and painting of the period in southern Africa (particularly South Africa, Lesotho,
which Gothic architecture flourished. and Zimbabwe) and to a lesser extent in northern
Africa Morocco.
C) A swaying elegance is often considered typical of
Gothic figures, which are generally more naturalistic C) Thus, the dinosaur fauna of the Late Triassic and
and less remote than those of the Romanesque Early Jurassic are generally similar across the
period. globe because there was only one continent rather
than several continents.
D) This architecture was not created by the Gothic
tribes who had destroyed the classical art of the D) By contrast, the continents surrounding Africa
Roman Empire. moved greatly, resulting in ocean barriers between
what were once contiguous land masses.
E) However, the movement became more serious in
tone and developed into a major strand in art. E) The boundary between the Triassic and Jurassic
Period is marked by extinctions globally, but it has
not been studied in detail in Africa.
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YDS MART 2019
76-80: For these questions, choose the irrelevant 78. (I) The world's reef systems face overwhelming stress
sentence in the passage. —threats from overfishing, pollution and climate change
being the main causes. (II) Most threatened is the
Caribbean reef system, with more than 80 percent of its
76. (I) Science that presents an organised view of the live coral cover having disappeared since the 1970s,
universe developed with the rise of Greek civilisation, largely due to global warming. (III) Coral has evolved a
starting about 600 BC. (II) Scholars from the Egyptian spectacular way of maximising its chances of survival.
and Mesopotamian civilisations already had learned (IV) A visual example of the damage being done is coral
many scientific results before the start of Greek bleaching, which turns coral from a natural pink shade
civilisation. (Ill) The Greeks developed institutions such to a ghostly white. (V) It is the result of warmer waters
as the Academy, the Lyceum, and the Museum, that destroying the algae that give coral its usual colour.
pursued science in somewhat the way the universities A) I B) II C) III D) IV E) V
do today. (IV) When the Academy and Lyceum were
closed, and the Museum was destroyed, the Greek era
in science was over. (V) This period, from the birth of
Western civilisation in Europe to the start of what is
often called the Dark Ages, can be termed 'Antiquity'.
A) I B) II C) III D) IV E) V
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YDS MART 2019
1. C 2. D 3. D 4. A 5. E 6. B 7. D 8. C 9. A 10. E
11. C 12. C 13. D 14. E 15. A 16. B 17. C 18. E 19. B 20. E
21. D 22. B 23. D 24. A 25. C 26. E 27. C 28. A 29. B 30. C
31. D 32. D 33. A 34. E 35. B 36. C 37. A 38. E 39. A 40. C
41. D 42. B 43. C 44. D 45. C 46. E 47. B 48. D 49. A 50. E
51. A 52. E 53. A 54. B 55. C 56. D 57. D 58. B 59. D 60. C
61. A 62. E 63. A 64. B 65. C 66. E 67. B 68. A 69. D 70. B
71.C 72. E 73. B 74. A 75. D 76. B 77. D 78. C 79. A 80. E
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