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Vocabulary Test...

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  • Question 1
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    [passage-header]Read the passage and answer the question that follows:[/passage-header]As heart disease continues to be the number one killer in the United States, researchers have become increasingly interested in identifying the potential risk factors that trigger heart attacks. High-fat diets and "life in the fast lane" have long been known to contribute to the high incidence of heart failure. But according to new studies, the list of risk factors may be significantly longer and quite surprising. Heart failure, for example, appears to have seasonal and temporal patterns. A higher percentage of heart attacks occur in cold weather and more people experience heart failure on Monday than on any other day of the week. In addition, people are more susceptible to heart attacks in the first few hours after waking. Cardiologists first observed this morning phenomenon in the mid-1980s and have since discovered a number of possible causes. An early morning rise in blood pressure, heart rate and concentration of heart stimulating hormones, plus a reduction of blood flow to the heart, may all contribute to the higher incidence of heart attacks between the hours of 8.00 A.M. and 10.00 A.M. In other studies, both birthday and bachelorhood have been implicated as risk factors. Statistics reveal that heart attack rates increase significantly for both females and males in the few days immediately preceding and following their birthdays. And unmarried men are more at risk for heart attacks than their married counterparts. Though stress is thought to be linked in some way to all of the aforementioned risk factors, intense research continues in the hope of further comprehending why and how heart failure is triggered.

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    As used in the passage, which of the following could best replace the word 'reveal'?

  • Question 2
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    [passage-header]Read the passage and answer the question that follows:[/passage-header]A jolly musicologist by the entirely unobjectionable name of Henry Pleasants has written a book called "The Agony of Modern Music". That word 'agony' is right. Much of it is just not written down but improvised. Much of what passes for the music of these times is raucous noise and the excuse for persisting with it is that every common youngster understands and likes it. The pleasant fellow concedes that "serious" music is virtually dead. This may be dismissed as yet another pleasantry which the undirected young indulge in. Paul Hinde Smith, possibly one of the last of the classical giants, once said that some composers tended to develop an over sublimated technique which produces images of emotions that are far removed from any emotional experience a relatively normal human being ever has. That is just the point. High art can never be totally democratized. There is a barrier between the egghead and the hoi poll oi and it would be lazy idealism to ignore this. When Bach played and Beethoven roared, who was then the gentleman? The pity of it is that while talking music to the masses, all known rules are broken and improvisation becomes king. That, roughly speaking, is how jazz was born: by dropping discipline, inspiration, deep personal emotions and every element of creative art, and adopting improvisation as its main rationale. Why they even tried to smuggle bits of jazz into serious music so that the composers could somehow survive. Now they are going one step further: learn it by ear, don't write down the stuff, make it up as you go along and hope, by these shoddy techniques, that everyone present will applaud and, thus, provide the composer and the performers with their daily bread.

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    Which of the following words can best replace the word 'raucous' in the paragraph?

  • Question 3
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    Fill in the blank with the most appropriate option.
    The master dispensed _______ the services of his servant.

  • Question 4
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    A synonym of EXEMPT is:

  • Question 5
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    Choose the correct meaning of the idiom/phrase.

    Dog in the manger

  • Question 6
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    Choose the correct meaning of the idiom/phrase.

    To bury the hatchet

  • Question 7
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    Choose the correct meaning of the idiom/phrase.

    Wear one's heart on one's sleeve

  • Question 8
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    Choose the correct meaning of the idiom/phrase.

    To have the gift of the gab

  • Question 9
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    Choose the correct meaning of the italicized idiom/phrase.

    Mr Gupta, who is one of the trustees of a big charity, is suspected of feathering his own nest.

  • Question 10
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    Choose the correct meaning of the idiom/phrase.

    No axe to grind

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