Math Computation Applied Mathematics Math Formulae, Definitions and Hints
Read the following passage
and then answer questions 1-6.
The splintered steps leading to the tenement’s entrance were rotted and uneven. They led to an
unlocked door which wobbled on its hinges and shrank from its frame. It creaked open to a dank, dark hall which smelled of urine and
sweat. The paint was peeling off cracked walls. The faint yellow light hung low
in the night.
Mr. and Mrs. Gomes lived on the second floor with their three young
children. Their four-room apartment was immaculate and tidy. The kitchen floor
glistened, and the flowered plates and glasses were neatly stacked in the
drainer.
In the living room, the sheer curtains were always drawn back, filtering
sunlight throughout the room, passing over a color television and several
porcelain icons. Besides the freestanding gas heater was a brand name stereo
system recently purchased on an “easy pay” credit plan.
The soft pine floors were all warped but recently painted. The wide
floorboards, once loose in many places, were now nailed down securely. Clear
plastic sheets were tacked over the windows to prevent heat loss.
The children, two girls and a boy, shared a
large room with one small window that was separated from the kitchen by a
curtain. The gas stove “warmed” them at night. Their toys were piled high in
wooden crates. The children did not dare turn on the kitchen light for fear that
the six-legged, brown-bodied pests would dart out in front of them.
The Gomes family had rented this apartment for ten years, ever since they
came to this country. They had known no other home, although they had dreamed of many. Some day they hoped to live in a quiet
neighborhood with open yards and spotless sidewalks, where people get into cars
each weekday morning and commute to work.
1.
You can infer that the story
takes place in the
a.
summer
b.
spring
c.
fall
d.
winter
e.
none of the above
2.
In the third paragraph the
word icons means
a.
fine china plates
b.
ornate lamps
c.
religious figures
d.
ashtrays
e.
none of the above
3.
You can conclude that the
Gomes family members are
a.
native Americans
b.
c.
Chinese
d.
immigrants
e.
second generation Americans
4.
What would be the opposite
meaning of the word immaculate in the second paragraph?
a.
filthy
b.
girlish
c.
clean
d.
horrible
e.
modern
5.
What can you infer about the
children’s bedroom?
a.
It is well furnished.
b.
It is crowded.
c.
It has its own bathroom.
d.
It is well lighted.
e.
It is pest-free.
6.
The pests mentioned at the
end of the passage are probably
a.
ants
b.
mice
c.
rats
d.
moths
e.
cockroaches
Read the following passage
and choose the best answer for items 7 – 12.
What was Grandpa Tweedy
Like?
Then there was Grandpa Tweedy, my daddy’s daddy out in
When Papa left the farm at sixteen to go work for Grandpa Blakeslee, he
made twenty dollars a month and had to send half of it home to pay the field
hand who took his place. That was the custom. But even after Papa married at
nineteen, making forty dollars a month, he still had to send Grandpa Tweedy ten
of it, till the day he was twenty-one. My mother never said she didn’t like her
father-in-law, but I could tell she didn’t, and that may have been why.
What started me hating him, he wouldn’t let me
fish on Sunday. Said it was a sin. I remember I put out some set hooks late one
Saturday, thinking if I caught a fish, it wouldn’t be a sin to take him off the
hook next morning. End his suffering, you know. Early Sunday I ran down to the
river and one of the lines was just a jiggling! But when I ran up the hill and
asked Grandpa’s permission to get my fish off the hook he said, “Hit’ll still be thar t’morrer, Lord willin’. The Lord
ain’t willin’, it’ll be gone. Now git in the house and study your catechism till time to leave
for preachin’.”
Of course the fish was gone Monday morning. But I got back at Grandpa
Tweedy. I’d noticed a big hornet’s nest in the privy, just under the tin roof,
so I bided my time behind a tree till I saw him go in there. Giving him just
long enough to get settled good, I let fly with a rock
and hit that tin roof like a gunshot…
7. The statement “All he ever did was sit on the porch and swat flies” is a restatement of
a.
“he toiled not”
b.
“he talked of hard times”
c.
“called himself a farmer”
d.
“neither did he spend his
own money”
e.
“even had him a pet hen to
peck them up”
8. Which of the following actions would you expect Grandpa Tweedy to take?
a.
He would be the first man to
fix anything that needed fixing.
b.
He would tend his lilies
night and day just like in the Bible.
c.
He would talk for hours on
end about his incredible good fortune.
d.
He would be glad to lend a
helping hand to his children.
e.
He would let a fence fall
down before he would repair it.
9.
Which statement reflects the
most likely reason that Papa sent money home to Grandpa Tweedy?
a.
Papa was paying back his
father for money loaned to him for school.
b.
Children have a moral
obligation to support parents who cannot support themselves.
c.
Papa felt guilty for having
left the farm.
d.
Papa felt guilty for not
having brought his wife back to the farm to live.
e.
Grandpa Tweedy did not like
to spend his own money, so he asked Papa to help out.
10.
What happened when the
speaker told Grandpa Tweedy about the fish?
a.
Grandpa said it was a gift
from God.
b.
Grandpa refused permission
to take the fish off the hook.
c.
Grandpa gave his permission
to get the fish.
d.
Grandpa said to wait until
after preaching.
e.
Grandpa got angry at the
speaker.
11.
Which of the following is
the best summary of what happened in the last paragraph?
a.
The speaker started hating
Grandpa Tweedy.
b.
Grandpa threw a rock at the
privy.
c.
The fish got away from the
hook.
d.
The speaker stirred up the
hornets while Grandpa was in the outhouse.
e.
The speaker set a trap for
grandpa by hiding a hornet’s nest in a tree.
12.
How did the speaker justify
taking the fish off the hook?
a.
The speaker planned to ask
Grandpa’s permission to get the fish off the hook.
b.
The speaker said that if it
were done on Saturday, it would not be a sin.
c.
The speaker thought that it
would be almost a good deed.
d.
The speaker told Grandpa
that it was less work that way.
e.
The speaker planned to study
the catechism as soon as the fish was off the hook.
Using the form provided and the conversation below, answer questions 13 – 18.
|
Date:
Time: WHILE YOU WERE OUT MOf Phone NumbersOffice TelephonedVoicemail
Please Call FAX
Returned your call Pager
Called to see you E-mail Urgent!
Message _________________________________
_________________________________ Operator: |
Ms. Wilson: Peabody
Incorporated, Purchasing, May I help you?
Mr. Richards: This is Ralph Richards, of Widget Industries. I need to speak to Sam Waters.
Ms. Wilson: I’m sorry Mr. Waters is in a meeting. I’m Sara Wilson, his assistant, is there anything I can do for you, or may I take a message.
Mr. Richards: Kyle Kirby, my line manager, and Sam spoke yesterday over lunch, and your boss was interested in the aluminum alloy coated widgets we produce for Cramer Manufacturing. Sam wanted a price on 5 gross of #6 stainless steel widgets. If you could tell him that the price would be $365.82 tax and delivery included. There would be no extra charge for next day delivery either since we’re just down the road. If he has any questions he can call me at 555-6210, extension 1101.
Ms. Wilson: Thank you, Mr. Richards. I’ll see that he gets the message.
13. Whose name should be written on the top line of the form next to the word To?
a. Sara Wilson
b. Ralph Richards
c. Sam Waters
d. Kyle Kirby
14. Whose name should be written on the line next to the letter M?
a. Sara Wilson
b. Ralph Richards
c. Sam Waters
d. Kyle Kirby
15. What information need not be included in the message?
a. Kyle Kirby is a line manager.
b. 5 gross of widgets cost $365.82.
c. No extra charge for next day delivery.
d. Extension 1101
16. Which box would most likely be checked for this phone message?
a. Urgent!
b. Wants to see you
c. Telephoned
d. Returned your call
17. The second time Mr. Richards speaks he uses the word “interested,” which of the following words has the opposite meaning?
a. apathy
b. responsive
c. concerned
d. callous
18. The second time Mr. Richards speaks he uses the word “questions,” which of the following words has the same meaning?
a. interrogation
b. inquiries
c. assumptions
d. ideas
Read the following poems and answer the corresponding questions.
Man on Wheels, by Karl Shapiro
Cars are wicked, poets think
Wrong as usual. Cars are part of man.
Cars are biological.
A man without a car is like a clam without a shell.
Granted, machinery is hell,
But carless man is careless and defenseless.
Ford is a skin of present animal.
Automobile is shell.
You get yourself a shell or else.
19. What is meant by the phrase, “Ford is skin of present animal?”
a. There is a new animal living today called a Ford.
b. Cars are as much a part of people’s lives today as their own skin.
c. People should buy Fords, not GM cars.
d. Modern life is too full of machinery.
e. If you cannot have a skin, you need a shell.
20. What is the poet’s basic attitude toward cars?
a. Cars are wicked.
b. Cars and other machines are hell.
c. Cars are a necessary part of modern life.
d. Clams should drive cars.
e. A man without a car does not have a care in the world.
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Where the Wind Went Crazy, By Joyce Carol Oates
the tops of the palm trees are smashed
palm leaves hang, down shredded
limp and light as threads
the trunks like concrete
that never lived mammoth towers
uninhabited
I feel the two of us grown to
mammoth towers
our heads dizzied by the height
time is piled beneath us
blocks pushing us up
there is motion of nerves between us
strung between us like wires
lovers, we need no hurricane
to make war upon each other
and each cell of our living tissue
is at peace
21. Why does the poet describe palm trees?
a. She likes palm trees.
b. She is comparing palm trees and telephone poles.
c. She is comparing lovers to palm trees torn up by a hurricane.
d. She is comparing palm trees to a hurricane.
e. She is comparing palm trees to empty apartment buildings.
22. Which statement below best describes what the poet means by “there is motion of nerve between us strung between us like wires?”
a. She feels like a palm tree.
b. There is a sense of tension, like electricity, between the lovers.
c. The hurricane makes her nervous.
d. She feels like a tower.
e. She is insane.
Mathematics Computation
Math Computation Applied Mathematics Math Formulae, Definitions and Hints
Directions: Complete the
following operations. Reduce fractions to simplest terms.
1.
a. 6311
53
b. 6301
+ 6248
c. 6201
d. 6291
2.
a. 662
1283
b. 562
- 621
c. 682
d. 762
3.
a. 65
134
b. 55
- 89
c. 50
d. 45
4.
a. 1.6
16 x 10 =
b. 16
c. 160
d. 1600
5.
a. 15
84) 2100
b. 25
c. 35
d. 45
6.
a. 8.473
5.4
b. 8.0473
+3.073
c. 8.13
d. 9.13
7.
a. 7.7
7.45
b. 6.7
-
0.38
c. 7.07
d. 6.07
8.
a. 7032.22
950.3
b. 703.222
x 7.4
c. 7032.12
d. 70322.2
9.
a. 89.2
253.356 ¸ 2.58= b. 96.4
c. 98.4
d. 98.2
10.
a. 239. 05
958 ¸ 4 = b. 239.5
c. 240
d. 239.6
11.
a. 0.13
3.8) 494 b. 1.3
c. 13
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