SAT Mc Graw Hill 2011

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

606 MCGRAW-HILL’S SAT



  1. The quotation from Mahatma Gandhi
    (lines 3–4) suggests that Gandhi believed that
    Western civilization was
    (A) on the decline
    (B) the beneficiary of unfair economic
    practices
    (C) antithetical to progress in Asia
    (D) a great triumph
    (E) an unrealized concept

  2. The “voices” mentioned in line 16 can be in-
    ferred to include all of the following EXCEPT
    (A) American politicians
    (B) leaders like Mahatma Gandhi
    (C) television journalists
    (D) some leaders of large corporations
    (E) those who believe that the United States
    is faithful to the capitalist ideal

  3. The primary function of the second paragraph
    (lines 20–37) is to
    (A) illustrate a debate
    (B) provide a statistical analysis
    (C) explain a concept
    (D) give historical background
    (E) describe a popular viewpoint

  4. By saying that “the story would likely be very dif-
    ferent” (lines 36–37), the passage suggests that
    (A) the rules of a free market are selectively
    applied
    (B) trade laws favor smaller countries
    (C) American companies produce the best
    products
    (D) Asian countries are moving away from
    the free market
    (E) American companies share the same
    interests as Indian companies


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  1. The quotation marks around particular words in
    the fourth paragraph (lines 55–65) serve pri-
    marily to indicate that those words are
    (A) being used ironically
    (B) technical economic terms
    (C) adaptations of foreign words
    (D) recently coined
    (E) direct quotations from a document
    described earlier

  2. The “triumph” described in line 63 is charac-
    terized as
    (A) a rare success for free markets
    (B) a legislative victory
    (C) a breakthrough in the development of
    inexpensive drugs
    (D) a tragic violation of the principle of free
    trade
    (E) a success that was based on luck

  3. The passage suggests that the “entrepreneur”
    (lines 68–69) differs from executives in the
    pharmaceutical industry in that the entre-
    preneur
    (A) does not abide by free-market ideals
    (B) risks his or her own money
    (C) does not hire employees from overseas
    (D) works more closely with representatives
    in Washington
    (E) needs less money to start a typical
    business

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