1. 15.
sorularda,
cümlede
bos
bırakılan
yerlere
uygun
düsen
sözcük
ya
da
ifadeyi
bulunuz.
1. These novels illustrate the
author's — for the struggles of young people and
the proper help that should be given.
A) deceit
B) obligation
C) alteration
D) disturbance
E)
concem
2. The quartet's rendering of
Mozart is — good, but l have
mixed feelings about the Schubert collection.
A) exceptionally
B) sensitively
C) preferably
D) impulsively
E) impartially
3. The book is surprisingly lucid
and manages to make the controversial
fıeld of
evolutionary psychology — to the average
intelligent reader.
A) susceptible
B) conducive
C) available
D) indulgent
E) exclusive
4. America's subsidies to its
cotton farmers have long been a noteworthy
example of the harm that rich countries'
subsidies — on the poor.
A) enforce
B) provide
C) exceed
D) Inflict
E) employ
5. As Egypt —
rts biggest
irrigation project, the Pharaohs' dream of
spreading their kingdoms into the
desertjs coming
true.
A) puis
off
B) embarks on ,
C) breaks up
D) tries on
E) shows up
6. China's economic boom — a
growing need for energy that only foreign
supplies
A) will produce / used to satisfy
B) produced / had satisfied
C) is producing / could satisfy
D) has produced / can satisfy
E) would produce / would have satisfied ,
7. They hope that by surrounding
city centres and
likely terrorist targets with "soft walls", they
— it impossible for hijacked planes — anywhere
near them.
A)will make / to get
B) make / having got
C) make /to have got
D) have made / to be got
E) are making / getting
8. New DNA evidence hints that "African Eve",
the 150,000yearold female ancestor of every
person on Earth, — in Tanzania or Ethiopia.
A) has lived
B) is used to living
C) may have lived
D) would live
E) would be living
9. Socrates — that we —with the
improvement of our souls.
A) must have said /
would be concerned
B) had said / had to be concerned
C) was saying / should have been
concemed
D) has said / had been
concemed said
E) saids / should be
concemed
10. — its vast forests, Myanmar
was thought to possess the largest number of
tigers — India.
A)For/with
B) ın / for
C) At / to
D) With / after
E) Through / by
11. Though the most important
factors in pricing decisions are production
costs and the level — demand, broader company
objectives must also be
taken —consideration.
A) in / out of
B) of / into
C) with / for
D) between / by
E) on / under
12. Until people
reallze that they
have to develop new skills, there's no way the
economy can improve,?
A) is there
B) can there
C) can it
D) have they
E) can they ,
13. — they are accessible by boat
only, these islands
are still largely undeveloped.
A) Even
B)As if
C) Although
D) Conseguently
E) Since
14. The
most devastating human impact on environments
can be seen on islands — settlers have
introduced new animals and plants.
A)which
B) to whom
C) what
D) to which
E) whom
15. Human
activrty has destroyed — plant species
that collective action is essential for the
conservation of those that remain.
A) more
B) so many
C) many more
D) the most
E) as many
16. 20.
sorularda,
asağıdaki
parçada
numaralanmıs
yerlere
uygun
düsen
sözcük
ya
da
ifadeyi
bulunuz.
When the rage for orchids hit Europe in the
nineteenth century collectors immediately
reallzed that
greenhouses were needed to provide (16) —
growing conditions. (17) — greenhouses were a
luxury (18) — the very wealthy. But before long,
greenhouses (19) —
massproduced, (20) — made them more
affordable for orchid lovers of modest means.
16.
A) better
B) best
C) as good
D) the most
E) more
17.
A) At times
B) At present
C) Eventually
D) Hardly
E) At first
18.
A) for
B) off
C) about
D) over
E) from
19.
A) have been
B) were being
C) had been
D) would have been
E) will be
20.
A) what
B) thus
C) which
D) but
E)so
21. — 25.
sorularda,
asağıdaki parçada
numaralanmıs
yerlere
uygun
düsen
sözcük
ya
da
ifadeyi
bulunuz.
Until the middle of the
nineteenth century, most Americans were
indifferent to paint. Wood was plentiful and
cheap especially on the frontier; (21)——most
settlers had to chop down trees to dear
theîr land. (22)—
eager to start
farming, they used their wood to build their
cabins as cheaply and quickly as possible. If
they had painted their buildings, this (23) —
their durability;(24)
— painting was an expensive and
timeconsuming job.
There were (25) ——more urgent calls upon their
time and their money.
21.
A) on the contrary
B) as if
C) similarly
D) in case
E) in fact
22.
A) Having been
B) To be
C) To have been
D) Being
E) Having to be
23.
A) had extended
B) might have extended
C) vas extending
D) would be extending
E) might extend
24.
A) but
B) whether
C) unless
D) that
E) if
25.
A)none
B) any
C) anywhere
D) other
E)so
26. 35.
sorularda,
verilen
cümleyi
uygun
sekilde
tamamlayan
ifadeyi
bulunuz.
26. Since the
migratory routes of cranes ignore political
boundaries,
A) a species bank of captive
cranes has been created to guard against
extinction
B) some cranes depend exclusively upon wetlands
for nesting and feeding
Of any effort to protect them requires
theparticipation of
severaı countries
D) an International effort to ensure safe
passage for cranes would have been hardly
feasible
E) this was simply a means to draw global
attention to cranes and their work
27. — where farmers benefit from
legal opium cultivation for the production of
painkillers.
A) Turkey is one of several countries
B) The UN's drugcontrol
agency admits that
cropsubstitution projects are inadequate
Ç) Total opium elimination in these countries is
hardlyfeasible
D) Until recently, only the trafficking of opium
was prohibited in Laos, not the cultivation of
it
E) Opium is one of the oldest painkillers known
28. —, when Eveready introduced
the alkallne
battery.
A) Their technological success is
stili being
guestioned
B) Many new materials have been adapted for
battery use
C) Mercury, too, has recently been eliminated
from batteries on account of its toxicity
D) The lifespans of
these batteries are expected to improve
5) The first major advance in flashlight
batteries came in 1959
29. — that New York
City is being badly run and desperately needs to
be reorganized.
A) None of them had admitted
B) Everybody
acknovwledges
C) Many Americans were asking the authorities
D) Letters of protest had been written to the
Mayor's Office
E) Many journallsts
would recommend
30. Because scientists believe
that comets in the distant past deposited water
and organic compounds on both Earth and its moon
A) in the 1990s, two probes that orbited the
moon raised new guestions
about Earth's airless satellite
B) it is the largest impact crater in the entire
solar system
C) the exploration agenda would have been
changed
D) wellpreserved ice
at the lunar poles could yield clues to the
origins of life
E) those lunar missions had been supported by
very few scientists
31. —there's a lot of truth in
the saying that an orchestra is only as good as
its conductor.
A) Though there are exceptions
B) If the orchestra were in better shape
C) Since his abilities as an orchestra builder
are very impressive
D) Once they had gained
intemational recognition
E) Since music critics are involved in a serious
controversy
32. in good hands, the
harpsichord will always have things to offer
A) that its value has never been doubted
B) which other musical Instruments cannot
C) if yet another challenge had to be faced
D) even when the performances were not quite
flawless
E) since a substantial amount of his
earty period has
been recorded
33. Many of Europe's museums and
cultural institutions are in financial trouble,
A) even though most of America's cultural
institutions get little cash from the federal
government
B) since plans by the
Itallan government to privatize parts of
the country's cultural heritage have fallen
through
C) as governments find themselves forced to cut
subsidies
D) because the Itallan
government has come up with a bold plan to ease
the cash crisis facing the museums
E) if France's new culture minister has come out
in favour of a plan
for more independence for national museums
34. Well before 11 September,
peopie began to fear
A) if they had achieved their political ends
B) that terrorists would start to use chemical,
biological and nuclear weapons
C) so that Americans can confront the worst
threats before they emerge
D) in case America will have to consider
creating a domesttc
intelligence agency
E) when the United States toppled the regime
that gave alQaeda
its Afghan sanctuary
35. in the 20th century, most of the large
military powers developed biological weapons,
A) but moral repugnance kept these countries
from using them against each other
B) although bioweapons
have a fearful potential that has long been
understood
C) while as many as 17 countries are
stili thought to
have kept some to use in an emergency
D) so long as none of the regimes is supporting
a terrorist group
E) just as nonlethal
weapons merit particular attention
36. 40.
sorularda,
verilen
ingilizce
cümleye
anlamca en
yakın
Türkçe
cümleyi
bulunuz.
36.
lraq is making
efforts to rebuild its shattered financial
system by granting three foreign banks
permission to operate in the country.
A) Yok
olmus mall
sistemini
yeniden
kurabilmek
için
çalısmalara
baslamıs
olan
Irak,
sadece
üç
yabancı
bankanın
ülkede
faallyet
göstermesine
izin
veriyor.
B) Irak,
yıkılmıs
olan mall
sistemini
yeniden
yapılandırmak
amacıyla
çalısmalara
baslamıs
ve
üç
yabancı
bankanın
ülkede
faallyete
geçmesine
izin
vermistir.
C) Dağılmıs
olan mall
sistemini
yeniden
düzenlemek
için
gayret
içine
giren
Irak,
ülkede
üç
yabancı
bankanın
faallyet
göstermesine
onay
vermistir.
D) Irak'ın
yabancı
bankalardan
üçünün
ülkede
faallyete
geçmesine
onay
vermesi,
yıkılan mall
sistemini
yeniden
kurmaya
çalıstığının
göster
gesidir.
E) Irak,
ülkede
faallyet
göstermeleri
için
üç
yabancı
bankaya
izin
vererek,
paramparça
olmus mall S
sistemini
yeniden
kurmaya
çaba
gösteriyor.
37. The Celts, who were later
called "Gauls" by
the Romans, migrated from the Rhine valley into
the region that is now France.
A)
Geçmiste Romalıların
"Salyalılar"
dediği
Keltier,
Ren
vadisinden
göç
ederek
bugünkü
Fransa'ya
yerlesmislerdir.
B) Romalıların "Salyalılar"
olarak
adlandırdığı
Keltier,
bugünkü
Fransa'nın
yakınlarına, Ren
vadisinden
göç
ederek
gelmislerdir.
C)
Bugün Fransa
olan
bölgeye
Ren
vadisinden
göç
etmis
olan
Keltlere,
Romalılar "Salyalılar"
adını
vermisti.
D) Daha
sonra
Romalılar
tarafından "Salyalılar"
olarak
adlandırılan
Keltier,
bugün
Fransa
olan
bölgeye,
Ren
vadisinden
göç
etmislerdir.
E) Romalılarca
uzun
yıllar
boyunca "Salyalılar"
olarak
adlandırılan
Keltier,
Ren
vadisinden
göç
edip
bugünkü
Fransa'ya
yerlesmislerdir.
38. The German government and the
opposition are expeçted
to agree on a new law to make it easier for
güallfıed foreigners
to sertle in
Genmany.
A) Alman
hükümeti
ve
muhalefetjff
üzerinde
uzlastığı
yeni
yasanın
nitelikli
yabancıların
Almanya'ya
yerlesmelerini
kolaylastırması
bekleniyor.
B) Alman
hükümeti
nitelikli
yabancıların
Almanya'ya
yerlesmelerini
kolaylastıran
yeni
bir
yasa
üzerinde
muhalefetle
anlasmayı
umuyor.
C) Alman
hükümeti
ile
muhalefetin,
nitelikli
yabancıların
Almanya'ya
yertesmelerini
kolaylastırmak
için
yeni
bir
yasa
üzerinde
anlasmaya
varmaları
bekleniyor.
D) Alman
muhalefetinin
nitelikli
yabancılann
Almanya'ya
daha
kolay
yerteseöilmelerini
sağlayacak
yeni
bir
yasa
üzerinde
hükümetle
anlastığı
belirtiliyor.
E) Alman
hükümeti
ve
muhalefetinin
uzlasarak,
nitelikli
yabancıların
Altrfanya'da
çalısmalarını
kolaylastıracak
yeni
yasayı
yakında
çıkarmaları
bekleniyor.
39. When the Mongol invasion started, the
Uygurs,
reallzing that
resistance was futile, submitted willingly to
Gengis Khan.
A) Moğol
istilası
yaygınlasınca,
direnisin
ise
yaramayacağını
anlayan
Uygurlar,
Cengiz
Han'a
gönüllü
teslim
oldular.
B) Moğol
istilası
baslayınca,
direnisin
bosuna
olduğunu
anlayan
Uygurlar,
Cengiz
Han'a
isteyerek
teslim
oldular.
C) Direnisin
bosuna
olduğuna
inanan
Uygurlar,
Moğol
istilası
baslar
tiaslamaz
Cengiz
Han'a
teslim
oldular.
D) Moğolların
istilası
baslayınca
direnmenin
bosuna
olduğunu
fark
eden
Uygurlar,
Cengiz
Han'ın
isteklerini
kabul
ettiler.
E) Moğol
istilası,
Uygurların
direnisin
bosuna
olduğuna
inanmalarına
yol
açtı
ve
Uygurlar,
Cengiz
Han'a
isteyerek
teslim
oldular.
40.
According to the UN observers in
ihe region, Rwandan
troops have reentered Congo in violation of the
peace treaty signed between the two countries
last year.
A) Bölgedeki
BM gözlemcilerine
göre,
Ruanda
askerleri,
geçen
yıl
iki
ülke
arasında
imzalanan
barıs
antlasmasına
aykırı
olarak,
yeniden
Kongo'ya
girmistir.
,
B) Bölgedeki BM
görevlilerine
göre,
geçen
yıl
iki
ülke
arasında
yapılan
barıs
antlasmasını
çiğneyen
Ruanda
askerleri,
Kongo'ya
tekrar
girmistir.
C) Bölgede
bulunan BM
görelilerine
göre,
Ruanda
askerleri
Kongo'ya
tekrar'girerek
geçen
yıl
yapın
barıs
antlasmasını
bozmustur.
D) Bölgede
görev
yapan BM
sorumlularına
göre,
Ruanda
askerleri
Kongo'ya
yeniden
girmis
ve
böylelikle
geçen
yıl
iki
ülke
arasında
imzalanmıs
olan
barıs
antlasmasını
ihlal
etmistir.
E) Bölgede
bulunan BM
gözlemcilerine
göre,
geçen
yıl
iki
ülke
arasında
imzalanan
barıs
antlasmasına
rağmen,
Ruanda
askerlerinin
çoğu
Kongo'ya
bir
kez
daha
girmistir.
41. 45.
sorularda,
verilen
Türkçe
cümleye
anlamca en
yakın
ingilizce
cümleyi
bulunuz.
41.
Nicholas Gane'in
yeni
yayımlanan
kitabı
Toplum
Kuramının
Geleceği,
dünyanın
önde
gelen
toplum
kuramcıları
ile
yapılan
bir
dizi
mülakatı
bir
araya
getirmektedir.
A) The
newlypublished book, The Future of Social
Theory by Nicholas Gene, draws heavily on a
series of interviews conducted by the world's
leading social theorists.
B) Nicholas Gane's
newjypublished book
The Future of Social Theory brings together a
series of interviews held with the world's
leading social theorists.
C) A series of interviews with the world's
leading social theorists was the starting point
for Nicholas Gane's
newlypublished The
Future of Social Theory.
D) Nicholas Gane
interviewed some of the world's leading social
theorists before writing The Future of Social
Theory which has repently
been published. '
E) Nicholas Gane's
newlypublished book
The Future of Sodal
Theorymakes
extensive use of interviews between the writer
and the world's leading social theorists.
42. 1 Mayıs
2004'te on yeni
ülkenin
Avrupa
Birliği'ne
girisi.
Demir
Perde
ile
zorla
bölünmüs
bir
kıtanın
bir
araya
gelisini
simgelemektedir.
A) The entrance, on1 May 2004, of ten new
countries to the European Union symbolizes the
comingtogether of a
continent forced apart by the Iron Curtain.
B) Ten new countries joined European Union on 1
May 2004 symbolizing the reunion of a continent
forced apart by the Iron Curtain.
C) On 1 May 2004, when ten new countries entered
the European Union, the forced division of a
continent by the Iron Curtain symbolically came
to an end.
D) The entrance of ten new countries to the
European Union on 1 May 2004 can also be
regarded as symbolizing the reunion of a
continent forced apaft
by the Iron Curtain.
E) With the entrance of ten new countries to the
European Union on 1 May2004, the symbolic
division of a continent by the Iron Curtain was
finally broken.
43. BM Güvenlîk
Konseyi
kitle
imhasilahlarına
sahip
olmayı,
bunlan.
üretmeyi
ve.bunlann
kaçakçılığını
yapmayı suç
saymaları
için
ülkelere
çağrıda
bulunan
bir
kararı
oybirliğiyle
almıstır.
A) The possession, manufacture and
traffıcking of
weapons of mass destruction have been banned in
all countries following a resolution to this
effect unanimously passed by the UN Security
Council.
B) Presumably, therUN
Security Council will unanimously pass a
resolution to demand that all countries
criminallze the
possession, manufactupfe
and traffıcking of
weapons of mass destruction.
C) The possession, manufacture and
traffıcking of
weapons of mass desioıction
have been criminallzed
in some countries following the passing of a
unanımous resolution
by the UN Security Council.
D) in line with a
resolotion of the UN
Security Council, countries have all made the
possession, manufacture smd
traffıcking of
weapons of mass destrucion
illegal. "
E) The UN Sgcurity
Council has unanimously passed resolution
calling upon countries to
criminallze the possession, manufacture
and traffıcking of
weapons of mass destruction.
44. Edebiyat
elestirisi
üzerine
yeni
bir
kitap
yazmıs
olan Mary
williams,
günümüzün en etkili
ve
özgün
edebiyat
elestirmenlerinden
ve feminist
düsünürlerinden
biridir.
A) Mary Williams, a feminist
thiinker, has
brought out a new book
whichjs about the most influential and
originalliterary
critics of our time.
B) Mary Williams, who is
oneof the most successful and original
critics of our time, has written a new book on
literary criticism and feminist thinking.
C) Mary Williams, who has written a new book on
literary criticism, is one of the most
influential and original literary critics and
feminist thinkers of our time.
D) One of the most impressive and innovative
literary critics of our age is Mary Williams, a
feminist thinker, who has brought out a new book
on literary criticism.
E) The new book on literary criticism written by
Mary Williams establishes her as one of the most
influential and stimulating of the feminist
critics of our age.
45. Osmanlı
imparatorluğu
doneminde,
Selanik
sehrinde ilk
futbol
maçını
düzenleyenler,
İngiliz
tütün
ve
çamuk
tüccarlarıydı.
A) it was during the
period of the Ottoman Empire that the
fırst football match
in the city of Salonika
was organized by British tobacco and cotton
traders.
B) it was British
tobacco and cotton traders who organized the
first football match in the city of
Salonika during the
period of the Ottoman Empire.
C) The first football match to be organized by
British tobacco and cotton traders was in the
city of Salonika
during the period of the Ottoman
Empire.
D) British tobacco and cotton traders held their
fırst football match
in Salonika during
the time of the Ottoman Empire.
E) The fırst
football match to be held in
Salonika was during
the time of the Ottoman Empire and was organized
by British tobacco and cotton traders.
46. 51.
sorularda,
bos bırakılan
yere,
parçanın
anlam
bütünlüğünü
sağlamak
için
getirilebilecek
cümleyi
bulunuz.
46. Most trees produce a ring of
new wood each year and these
circies of
growrth can
easilybe seen in a
crosssection of the
trunk of a felled tree. First, the rings become
narrower with the increasing age of the tree.
Second, the amount a tree grows each year is
affected by fluctuations in climate.
A) A narrow growth ring may be the result of a
cold spell in spring
B) in temperate regions, sunlight may be more
important than rainfall in affecting a tree's
growth
C) Several conditions can contribute to a
particularly thick annual ring
D) These rings are not of uniform thickness and
vary for two reasons
E) Results have been particularly impressive in
the American Southwest for a variety of reasons
47. If Johannesburg is to live up
to its potential, it must overcome its apartheid
legacy of division. Contact between the races
often remains awkward.......... The hope is
tîîat
witrî more children
mixıng at school,
the next generation will coexist more easily.
A) This is very understandable as the idea of
equallty is
stilli very new
B) One major concem
that all races have in common is crime
C) in the worst parts of the city, for example,
one in three people was robbed last year
D) The best restaurants of Africa are to be
found in Johannesburg as are the best hospitals
E) Indeed, in some suburbs living conditions are
good. but in many
quarters they remain harsh and often violent
48. To help users find reliable
nutrition Information on the internet, this
university maintains an online rating and review
guide called the Nutrition Navigator. Each
website receives a score from 1 to 25, and links
are provided to recommended sites.
A) For instance, many televised nutrition
messages are presented by celebrities, food
editors and chefs
B) Even so, the Nutrition Navigator remained the
best site from which to launch ventures into
nutrition cyberspace
C) Many people tüm
to their physicians for dietary advice,
expecting them to know all about
healthrelated
matters
D) The ratings reflect the opinions of a panel
of nutrition experts on selected websites on the
basis of their accuracy and depth
E) The Internet offers no guarantees of the
accuracy of the information found there
49. Poliçe
may soon have a new weapon in the
fıght against
erime:
earprints.
Earprints are left
when criminals press their ears against a door
ör window to listen
for sounds within.
A) They will also develop a database for ear
shapes, scars and creases
B) The Forensic Ear Identification project is
expected to come up with a
soiution to this problem
C) As with fingerprints,
earprints could help detectives to place
suspects at the scene of a crime
D)Even so,
earprints are
already being used as evidence in parts of
Europe
E)So it seems unlikely that
earprints will ever be used as evidence
in courtrooms
50.Robots
could soon be doing their bit for the
environment. The results suggest that herbicide
use could be reduced by 70% if farmers used
these robots to adopt more selective spraying
techniques.
A) The longerterm
goal is to avoid herbicides altogether
B) Trials are presently underway for a Danish
robot that maps the position of weeds growing
among crops
C) Naturally it would be better to have the
robot pull the weeds out of the ground rather
than poisoning them
D) These robots cannot distinguish between plant
species and treat anything green as a weed
E) The problem is not one of expense because
herbicides are cheap
51.The
internet introduces a technology which poses new
challenges to the protection of individual
privacy. Each of these systems is capable of
monitoring, capturing and storing Communications
that pass through it.
A) Apparently Internet technology can gather
personal Information without
fırst seeking
consent
B) in the US, most federal privacy laws apply
only to the federal government
C) it can be argued that intruding into others'
lives ' through unobtrusive surveillance,
through market research or through any other
means is a violation of privacy
D) Screening for employment purposes can
certainly be regarded as an invasion of personal
privacy
memurlar.net E) Information sent over this vast
network of networks may pass through many
computer systems before it reaches its final
destination
52. 57.
sorularda,
verilen
durumda
söylenmis
olabilecek
sözü
bulunuz.
52. A friend of yours has fallen
and broken his leg. it
will have to be in plaster for
guite some time.
Since he's normally a very active person, he's
going to find it very difficult to lead a more
sedentary life. You can't offer much comfort but
do your best and say:
A) l'm afraid your
leg won't heal for a long time.
B) What are you going to do all day stuck here?
C) What were you doing? You must have been very
careless.
D) What's happened has happened. You'll just
have to make the best of it.
E) Even when they take the plaster off, it will
still be difficult to walk!
53. Your department has hired a
newsecretary who is
shy and rather lacking
selfconfidence.You Know that the head of
the department, who she will be working for,
behaves rather formally although he is actually
a very sociable person. You want her to know
this, and so say:
A) He's so unpredictable; l don't think you'll
be able to put up with him.
B) If I were you, l'd
always be on my guard against him.
C) Don't be put off by his stiff manner; he's
really a very warm person.
D) I don't think you're the sort of person
who'll be happy to work with him.
E) You are lucky to have
göt this job; l'm
sure you'll do your best in it.
54. One of your officemates is
always coming in to work late. As he's a good
friend of yours, you've been keeping the fact
from the manager. But now you're getting tired
of this, so you decıde
to share your problem with another friend. You
say:
A) Could you have a word with him? Perhaps he'll
share his troubles with you.
B) What do you think of him? I think he's doing
guite well.
C) Everyone comes in late sometimes.
D) He's a good person, and the manager likes
him.
E) This has been going on far too long.
l'm
not prepared to cover up for him any longer!
55.A
junior member of the research team has messed up
a longterm
laboratory experiment with the result that
months of effort arejost.
He is, actually, a very
reliable.person and
wellquallfied. As he is very upset, you
want to comfort him and say:
A) Don't worry. Everyone gets it wrong
sometimes.
B) You should have been careful! You've ruined
everything!
C) Make sure this doesn't happen again!
Otherwise you'll be fired.
D) Everyone on the team must be very
annoyed, I imagine
E) l didn't expect you to be so careless and
irresponsible. what's
the matter with you?
56. At a company
boardmeeting you feel that
everyons
favours playing
safe. You feel no one is being
dynamicenough. You
believe one has to fight in order to win, so, in
an effort to stir up a more active response in
your colleagues, you say:
A) This board has always followed a cautious
policy, and I see no reason at all to do
otherwise.
l'm sure you
all agree.
B) You're right! We need to be extremely
cautious at this critical time, and take no
risks whatsoever.
C) Let's take our time over this decision.
There's no need at all to rush matters.
D) There's no point in being
middleoftheroad all
the time! Nothing can be achieved without taking
some reasonable risks.
E) Heated arguments never do any good so let us
all try to keep calm.
57. You and a colleague are
preparing a report for the 15
th
of the month.You
andyour colleague
are collecting the data for the report
separately but then all the Information will be
brought together and the report
finallzed. Your
colleague thinks this can be done in a day and
wants to do it on the 14
th.You feel this would be too late, and
so you say
A) Good; we can surely finish it in a day, can't
we?'
B) what's the matter?
Haven't you started collecting the data yet?
C) l don't like
leaving things till the last minute. AH sorts of
problems could crop up.
D) We must be very careful not to duplicate our
inforrnation and
there must be
nocontradictions.
E) So long as we start early in the
moming, we ought to
be able to finish it in time.".
58. 63.
sorularda,
cümleler
sırasıyla
okunduğunda
parçanın
anlam
bütünlüğünü
bozan
cümleyi
bulunuz.
58. (l)
in the 1996 movie Phenomenon, John Travolta
plays a smalltown
mechanic, George, who experiences a remarkable
transformation. (II) For many people, IQ is the
definition of intelligence and "hıgh
IQ is an unquestioned good. (III) Knocked
unconscibus by a
mysterious flash of light, George
Malley awakens to
fınd himself a
genius. (IV) Previously, he had been a man of
simple interests and modest accomplishments, but
suddenly he becomes intellectually insatiable.
(V) He devours several books a day, creates
invention after invention, beats his former
mentor at chess and cracks security codes in his
spare time.
A) l
B) II
C) III
D) IV
E) V
59. (I) Countries throughout the
world appear to be determined to avoid war at
any cost. (II) in
both France and Germany,
govemments are seeking to introduce more
flexibility into the labour
markets. (III) Germany plans to make it easier
to fire workers,
at least in small fırms.
(IV) it also plans to
curb unemployment and make jobseekers take
unattractive jobs. (V) The French are working on
similar lines, but hampered by their 35hourweek.
A) I
B) II
C) III
D) IV
E)V
60. (l)
The risks of flying and driving are influenced
by different parameters. (II) The risk of
driving depends largely on the distance
travelled. (III)
Most people do, in fact,
reallze that flying is safer than
driving, but stili
gel nervous about it. (IV) The risk of flying is
primarily affected by the number of take offs
and landings. (V) Indeed, over a 10year period,
95 per cent of all airline
fatallties occurred either during take
off or during landing.
A) l
B) II
C) III
D) IV
E) V
61. (l) Artists were much admired
ancient Greek society for their skill.(II)
Forexample, in the
case of vase painting, it was quite common for
the painter to sign the vessel in paint before
it was fired(III) This means that numerous
vessels are known to be the work of specific
artists. (IV) Obviously, art is not restricted
to the depiction of scenes or objects. (V)
in fact, for the
Attic blackfigure
style, twelve painters are known by name.
A) I
B) II
C) III
D) IV
E) V
62.(I)
it seems that some form of electric battery may
have been in use two centuries before Christ.
(II) in 1938 the German archaeologist Wilhelm
König found a small,
oddly confıgured
clay jar near Baghdad that he dated to 200 B.C.
(III) ın any event,
the modern history of batteries
begins.with the
itallan scientist
Alessandro Volta. (IV) It has a coiled
coppersheet inside
and an iron rod extending through the top. (When
filled with an acid such as vinegar, it could
have generated 1.5 to 2.0 volts.
A) I
B) II
C) III
D) IV
E)V
63. (I) New
legislation to ban the slaughter of horses for
human consumption in the state of
lllinois was
introduced on February 6 th,
2004, in the lllinois
House of Representatives. (II) On February 18
th,
2004, the bill was referred to the House
Executive Committee. (III) The legislation would
also make it illegal to transport horses into or
out of the state for slaughter (IV)The
'Cavel International
slaughter plant was destroyed by fire in March
of 2002. (V) The
antislaughter
jegislation caused a clash between
Horsemen's Council of Illinois, which opposes
the bill, and industry associations, welfare
groups and animal rights groups that support
it."
A) l
B) II
C) III
D) IV
E) V
64. 69.
sorularda,
verilen
cümleye
anlamca en
yakın
olan
cümleyi
bulunuz.
64. Chjna's
determination to put.people
in space dates back to the 1960's.
A) it was only in the
1 960s that China could
ontemplate travel in space
B) China has been resolutely sending people into
space ever since the early 1960s.
C) As far back as the 1960s, China also
recognized the need to send people into space.
D) From the 1960s onwards, China has been
captivated by space travel.
E) China has been set on getting people into
space ever since the 1960s.
65. They held a
dînner party to mark
the occasion of their fortieth wedding
anniversary
A) The dinner party
they gave was to commemorate forty years of
marriage.
B) They have been marriet
for forty years and the dinner party is by way
of celebration.
C) When they have been married for forty years
they will give a dinner party to celebrate the
fact.
D) At the dinner party, everyone congratulated
them on forty years of marriage.
E) They have been married for forty years and a
dinner party was held in their
honour.
66. He got to the top at last
because there was literally nobody standing in
his path.
A) it was a long,
hard grind to the top, but he finally made it.
B) If there had been any serious competition,
it's not likely that he'd have made it to the
top.
C) As there was absolutely no one to prevent him
from doing so, he finally made it to the top.
D) As there was no opposition, he
puickly rose to the
top.
E) Since he faced no serious competition, it was
inevitable that he should get to the top.
67. Information systems technology is one of
several tools available to managers for coping
with change.
A) The best means by which managers can cope
with change is Information systems technology.
B) Information systems technology is the one
medium which managers turn to when change
becomes inevitable.
C) With the introduction of information systems
technology managers now have a tool to ensure
they can cope with change.
D) information
systems technology is one of a number of mediums
which managers can tüm
to when faced with change.
E) With the assistance of, for instance,
information systems technology, managers find
they can keep control over change.
68. He's one of those people who
is always ready to promise help but rarely keeps
his promise.
A) He's often promised to help one, but never
once done so.
B) He's like lots of other people; he promises
to help but rarely does.
C) It's easy for him
to promise to help, but he never actually does
help.
D) Like so many others, he often promises to
help but then forgets to do so.
E) He's the sort of person who is good at
promising help, but almost always fails to do so
69. Get Jim to give the speech of welcome; he's
quite the best person for the job.
A) Try to persuade Jim to give the speech of
welcome: he's good at such things.
B) Jim will give a far better speech of welcome
than anyone else would; get him
do it.
C) As he's good at things like that, why don't
you get Jim to give the speech of welcome?
D) One person who is good at speechmaking is
Jim; ask him to do it.
E) Jim will make as good a speech of welcome as
anyone l know; see if he'll agree to do it.
70. 75.
sorularda,
karsılıklı
konusmanın
bos
bırakılan
kısmını
tamamlayabilecek
ifadeyi
bulunuz.
70. Colin :
l thought that with the introduction of the
euro, price variations in Europe would more or
less disappear.
Peter:
......
Colin :
......
Why not?
Peter:
There are several reasons. One is the different
tax rates,
especially~on~thThgs like alcohol."
A) A lot of people thought like that. And it
might still happen.
B) Actually, guite
the reverse has occurred.
C) It's stili too
earty to comment on
the matter. But the
differericesT are growing less.
D) That's what everyone expected. But it hasn't
worked out like that.
E) Price variations aren't such a bad thing
after all. l hope
they won't disappear.
71. Jane:
What were you doing all day? I kept phoning but
you were never in your office.
Neil:
......
Jane :
Was that really essential?
Neil :
it certainly was. Morale and the company spirit
both have a bearing on productivity.
A) The morning was taken up with meetings. And
there was a staff party in the
aftemoon that l had
to attend.
B) I spent most of the day in the factory: we
are reorganizing the assembly line.
C) l wasn't out all
that much, but l did have to go to the bank.
D) What did you want me for, anyway?
E) Meetings! Most of them related to the
installation of the new boiler.
l have doubts about
the reliability of the contractors.
72. Patrick :
Why are you so insistent that we must
fınd a framework of
collective security that does not rely on
nuclear deterrence?
Mark:
....
Patrick :
Why is that?
Mark:
Surely it's obvious: they have no cities that
can be bombed in reply and they are not
focussed on
selfpreservation.
A) l am convinced
that reliance on nuclear weapons
will'be obsolete in
the near future.
B) Because the very existence of nuclear weapons
gives rise to the pursuit of them.
C) Because we need to work towards global
security
D) Actually l'm not:
l don't think it's feasible.
E) Because the rise of terrorist groups makes
this essential.
73. John :
Borrowing to buy a house ought to be as simple a
transaction as borrowing to buy a car don't you
agree?
Robin :
Yes, l do. Why do you ask?
John :
.......
Robin :
I guess it is because the sums are much
much bigger, and the
period of repayment is longer.
A) Because l am interested in how banks fix
mortgage rates.
B) in fact, interest
rates have been rising since early summer.
C) But the govemment
has introduced new tax subsidies for home loans,
and that's a good thing.
D) Because it's not. There's far more
papenwork
reguired, and
it's altogether much
more complicated.
E) I think it's important.
Govemments should pay
nore attention to
housing finance.
74. Helen :
l see a great many airlines are
stili having to
struggle to keep going. That's not true of THY,
is it?
Chris :
No. They've actually made quite a good
profil over the past
year and are planning to expand.
Helen :
........
Chris :
l believe so. l do
know they've put in orders for 51 new planes for
next year.
A) Yes, l remember
reading something about it; but it's a
lorig time ago now.
B) Well, that's certainly good news. Will they
be flying further afield?
C) The security controls you have to go through
at airports make air travel quite objectionable.
D) That sounds reasonable. So many people
continue to avoid
travelling by air.
E) Airports are already far too big; don't you
agree?
75. Jennifer:
l see you've bought that new book that's come
out on Goya. Have you read it yet?
Karen :
No, l haven't. it
promises to be fascinating reading, so
l'm saving it up
till l've got a
prolonged period of leisure time.
Jennifer:
..........
Karen :
No, only with the ones l expect to be really
good.
A) l read a review of
it only the other day and it certainly does
sound fascinating!
B) Ouite right too!
What else do you plan to do?
C) Do you do that with all the books you buy?
O) Goya is not one of my
favourite artists, but that book helped
me to appreciate him a lot more.
E) You'll find the book throws a great deal of
light on his The Disasters of War.
74. Helen :
l see a great many airlines are
stili having to
struggle to keep going. That's not true of THY,
is it?
Chris :
No. They've actually made quite a good
profil
över the past year
and are planning to expand.
Helen :
Chris :
l believe so. l do
know they*ve put in
orders for 51 new planes for next year.
A) Yes, l remember
reading something about it; but it's a
lorig time ago now.
B) Well, that's certainly good news. Will they
be flying further afield?
The security controls you have to go through at
airports make air travel quite objectionable.
D) That sounds reasonable. So many people
continue to avoid
travelling by air.
E) Airports are already far too big; don't you
agree?
75. Jennifer:
l see you've bought that new book that's come
out ön Goya. Have
you read it yet?
Karen :
No, l haven't. it
promises to be fascinating reading, so
l'm saving it up
till l've
göt a
proionged period of
leisure time.
Jennifer:
Karen :
No, only with the ones l expect to be really
good.
A) l read a review of
it only the other day and 'rt
certainly does sound fascinating!
B) Ouite right too!
What else do you plan to do? Do you do that with
all the books you buy?
O) Goya is not one of my
favourite artists, but that book helped
me to appreciate him a lot more.
E) You'll find the book throws a great deal of
light on his The Disasters of War.
Diğer
sayfaya
geçiniz.
76. 80.
soruları
asağıdaki
parçaya
göre
cevaplayınız.
Why are people prejudiced? Not
surprisingly, theories of prejudice have tended
to focus on the more extreme forms of prejudice,
in particular when there is aggression and
violence. At the turn of the last century, it
was popular to consider prejudice to be an
innate and instinctive reaction to certain
categories of person (e.g
certain races) much as animals would react in
instinctive ways to one another. This sport of
approach is no longer popular, as it doesn't
stand up well to scientific scrutiny
However there may be
an innate component to prejudice. There is some
evidence that higher
anirnals, including humans,
haye an inherent
fear of the unfamilier
and unusual, which might set the' mould for
negative attitudes towards groups that are
considered different in certain ways. There is
also evidence for a mere exposure effect, in
which, people's attitudes towards various
stimuli (e.g. other people)
,lmprove as a
direct function of repeated.
exposure ör
familiarity with the stimulus, provided, that
initial reactions to the stimuli are not
negâtive. Another
perspective rests on the belief that prejudices
are leamed Indeed,
it has been argued that
hatre and suspicion of certain groups are
learned.early in
life, before.the
child even knows anything about the target group
and that this provides an emotional framework
that colours all
subsequent information about, and experience
with, the group.
76. According to the passage, at
the beginning of the 20th century, Prejudice was
generally regarded
A) in very much the same way as it is now
B) as a natural and intuitive response
C) as something that had to be corrected
D) as inevitable and therefore acceptable
E) as an outcome of parental conditioning
77. it is clear from the passage
that studies on prejudice
A) often spring from animal
behaviour
B) suggest that most children adopt the
prejudices of their parents
C) have finally established that it is innate
D) aim to discover how they can be overcome
E) have usually concentrated on the more
destructive expressions of it
78. One theory referred to in the passage,
suggests that man's innate fear of what is
rarely encountered or little known
A) may play a role in creating prejudices
B) prevents him from developing his social
possibilities
C) is an aspect of his character that relates
him very closely to the rest of the animal world
D) is far less strong now than formerly
E) has helped to make society more uniform
79. We learn from the passage
that the "mere exposure effect" occurs
when......
A) opposing groups agree to meet each other half
way
B) individuals start to copy the
behaviour
pattems of the
people they are with
C) people learn to face the fact that their
prejudices are without foundation
D) repeated contact with a particular group
leads to a better understanding of that group
E) people can admit that their first reactions
were f too extreme
80. According to the passage,
certain studies suggest that prejudice against
various groups of society
A) is on the increase simply because it is
receiving too much attention
B) develops early in life, even before any real
contact has been made with them
C) could best be overcome by keeping children
unaware of it
D) is largely racial in character
E) has only resulted in violence on very rare
occasions
81. 85.
soruları
asağıdaki
parçaya
göre
cevaplayınız.
By the earty 19th
century the eminent French zoologist Georges
Cuvier believed he
had found rock-solid evidence for the biblical
great flood. While studying the geological
strata around Paris, Cuvier
foundthat fossils of
sea creatures in one ancient layer of chalk were
overlaid by those of land creatures. Then just
as abruptly the layer above contained sea
creatures again, with the top layer showing
evidence of a vast and rapid inundation around
present-day Paris. Cuvier
regarded these sudden changes in the fossil
record as evidence for sudden Catastrophes which
devastated life on Earth, of which the great
flood was just the most recent example.
Cuvier's
discoverie's,
published in 1812 won support from a large
number of eminent scientists such as the
geologist Sir James Hall However there were a
few who were deeply
sceptical, pointing out that the evidence
of a global flood was far from conclusive. Most
sceptical of all
were the followers of the Scottish geologist
James Hutton. In 1795 he had published
atwo-volume text
based on the view that the slow steady processes
that shape our planet today,such
as erosion,werw also
crucially important in the distant past.
81. We learn from the passage
that many scientists
A) gave full support to
Çuvier's view that the great flood had
actually laken place
B) were not at all impressed by
Cuvier's discoveries
in the Paris area
C) followed up Cuvier's
excavations of marine fossils
D) were, like Cuvier,
engaged in a search for evidence of the great
flood
E) ceased to be sceptical
of the great flood once Sir James Hail had given
his support to
Cuvier
82. it is
pointed.out in the passage, that in the
course of excavations near Paris
Cuvier
A) slowly came to recognize the geological
significance of the biblical great flood
B) was particularly surprised that there were
chalk formations in the area
C) was slow to recognize the geological
importance of marine fossils
D) grew interested in the fossils of sea
creatures only after he came across a second
layer
E) discovered altemating
layers of fossils relating to sea and land
creatures
83. it
is clear from the passage that
Cuvier......
A) adopted an indifferent attitude towards the
attacks of his critics
B) was greatly influenced by Hutton's theory
conceming the
Earth's formation
C) was particularly interested in marine fossils
and concentrated on them for research purposes
d) interpreted his fossil discoveries as
indications of major catastrophes similar to the
great flood
E) had devoted years of research to establishing
that the biblical great flood had actually
occurred
84. According to the passage,
Cuvier's
critics.......
A) were extremely jealous of his discoveries
near Paris
B) felt that there was insufficient geological
evidence to confırm
that the biblical great flood ever had occurred
C) regarded erosion as only a minor geological
process
D) were also equally opposed to the views
expressed by Hutton
E) certainly believed there had been a global
flood but did not regard his discoveries as
scientifically important
85. As we learn from the passage,
Hutton's theory was that.....
A) long-term geological change, such as erosion,
had been of paramount importance in the Earth's
history
B) erosion was the single most important cause
of geological change on Earth
C) some geological processes, such as erosion,
were relatively recent in the history of the
Earth
D) our planet had been subjected to countless
catastrophies in the
distant past
E) the formation of our planet was the outcome
of different processes in different places
86. - 90.
soruları
aşağıdaki
parçaya
göre
cevaplayınız.
No child is too young to play and
therefore to engage in engineering, even though
it is of a primitive kind. We all did so as
children ourselves when we devised our own toys
and games and sometimes even imaginary friends
to enjoy them with us. the
idea of playfulness is embedded in engineering
through the concepts of invention and design.
Not that engineering is trivial; rather, the
heart of the activity is to give imagination its
freedom to dream and turn those dreams into
reality. Children do experience the essence of
engineering in their earliest activities, yet
there is seldom any recognition that this is the
case. They may hear the word "engineer" only in
connection with railroad locomotives and have no
idea that their playful activity
coul become a
lifelong profession. Engineers themselves are
understandably reluctant to equate their
professional activity with
meer child's
play. After all, they studied long and hard to
master comlicated
knowledge of atoms and
molekules, stresses and strains, heat and
power, current and voltages, bits and bytes.
they use computers
for serious modelling
and calculation, not for fun and games, They
design and build real towers and bridges that
test the limits of reliability and safety, not
toy ones that totter and fall down with little
consequence.
86. The main point the
wrîter is making in
this passage is that .......
A) man has practised
engineering ever since primitive times
B) some children are born to be engineers
C) children and engineers both have the capacity
to imagine and create
D) reliability and safety are minor details for
the professional engineer
E) any engineering fault in design
ör calculation does
have serious
conseguences
87. One point stressed in the
passage is that professional
engineering ..........
A) is very different from all other scientific
activities
B) reguires more
imagination than technical knowledge and
calculation
C) makes little use of theoretical knowledge
D) gives priority to design rather than to
invention
E) covers a vast field of involved or intricate
subjects of wide scope
88. As wecan see
from the passage, the writer is
careful..........
A) not to exaggerate the importance of creative
play to a child
B) to list all areas that are of
concem to an
engineer
C) to show how slowly a child's mental capacity
develops
D) not to offend engineers by his comparison
E) to avoid using technical terminology in the
passage
89. it
is suggested in the passage that
children..........
A) are not aware of the fact that in their games
they are involved in some kind of engineering
activity
B) should be constantly encouraged to play games
that involve engineering techniques
C) love to imitate the activities that go on
around them
D) are incapable of imaginative thinking
E) have a primitive perception of life
90. According to the passage,
what children and engineers have in common
are..........
A) reliability and safety
B) experience and knowledge
C) invention and design
D) modelling and
calculation
E) recognition and
reallty
91 - 95.
soruları
aşağıdaki
parçaya
göre
cevaplayınız.
Europe and Japan do not use fuel
economy standards to any significant degree, but
instead rely principally on high taxes to reduce
gas consumption. Their average tax
i is more than $2
per gallon, while in the US, federal gas taxes
are only 18 EURO per gallon and average state
taxes 22 euro per gallon. Higher prices at the
pump rusulting from
higher taxes increase consumer demand for cars
with better fuel economy.
They aslo
encouarege consumers
to reduce their driving. Research shows
that federal taxes on gasoline would have to
increase by a bit less than 50 euro per gallon
to cut gasoline consumptin
in the US. Although a 50 euro
incerase is a lot
compared with the present average total tax of
40 euro, it would raise retail gas prices to
only a little more than $2 per gallon, tax
included. This is far below prices in
europe
and Jaan.
even if federal taxes
on gas were doubled, US retail gas prices would
still be much below those in other developed
natşions.
91. According to the passage,
efforts have been made —.
A) to compare the levels of fuel consumption as
well as fuel prices in Europe
B) to assess what price increases would lead to
a significant reduction in fuel consumption in
the US
C) to give more appeal to public transport
D) to establish what vehicle types consume less
fuel
E) to develop fuel-efficient vehicles for sale
in the US
92. It is clear from the passage
that Japan's strategy to keep fuel consumption
down —.
a) Depends largely on the high taxation of fuel
B) has been greatly criticized by the public
C) has not been as effective as was originally
envisaged
D) has set an example that Europe is now
adopting
E) has had no effect upon the country's car
production technologies
93. According to the passage, the
combined federal and state taxes on gas in the
US —.
A) have exceeded those currently in use in
Europe
B) Are so high that they have forced Japanese
car manufacturers to change their production
strategies
C) have become a major public concern
D) have suddenly caused fuel prices to rise
sharply
E) amount to much less than the tax paid in
Japan
94. We learn from the passage
that one effect of higher taxes on fuel —.
A) has been a great deal of uneasiness and even
anger among consumers
B) has been a noticeable drop in car sales
everywhere
C) has been to draw attention to a much wider
range of energy sources
D) is an increased demand for vehicles which
consume less fuel
E) is that Europe's production of fuel-economy
vehicles has increased remarkably
95. One point stressed in the
passage is that fuel prices in
Jhe US, —'—.
A) which inciude
both federal and state taxes, are expected to
rise considerably
B) which have been increasing steadily for quite
some time now, have almost
equalled those in Japan and even Europe
C) even if the taxes were to be increased
considerably, would stili
be much lower than in other industrialized
countries
D) which have not risen for a long time, seem
likely to remain stable
E) where consumers go for cars with better fuel
economy, have caused no change in driving habits
96. - 100.
soruları
aşağıdaki
parçaya
göre
cevaplayınız.
Throughout his
workinq life,
Shakespeare worked as an actor in the midst of a
troupe. We know little about his first years in
London, For a few years between 1585 and 1592
his name disappears altogether from the public
records, and the most
likelt reason for this is that, for at
least some of this time, he was working for one
of the city's acting companies; as a junior
member he would not be listed among the troupe's
principal playres.
In the late 1580s theatrical activity in
london
was largely concentrated in
shoreditch and
Southwark, districts of
london.
Shakespeara could
have lived anywhere, but
Shoreditch, which would have been cheap
and convenient, is a likely candidate for a
young actor. In his early career Shakespeare may
have moved from troupe to troupe in order to
survive. Whatever the case, working conditions
must have been similar. Sundays, religious
holidays and disasters aside, a company would
perform a different play each afternoon of the
week, though some plays would be repeated in the
weeks ahead. An actor usually had to keep at
least 30 parts in his memory and a leading
player such as Alleyn
or Burbage must have
kept in mind nearly 5,00
lines a week.
96. According to the passage, in
Shakespeare's time,--------
A) it was not unusual for actors to appear in a
great many roles each week
B) there was no theatrical activity anywhere in
England except for London
C) leading actors would only agree to appear in
certain roles
D) an acting company usually staged a new play
each week
E) acting was regarded as an immoral occupation
97. We learn from the passage
that, in Shakespeare's London, theatres —.
A) competed with each other to get
Alleyn or
Burbage in their
troupe
B) were normally öpen
to the public six afternoons a week
C) provided actors with a comfortable and
profıtable way of
life
D) were rather like drama schools and they
trained actors
E) all had their own leading players
98. it
is clear ,from the passage that Shakespeare,
during his earty
years in London, —.
A) gained experience as an actor by appearing in
a huge variety of parts
B) was encouraged to write plays by
Alleyn and
Burbage
C) devoted himself primarily to the writing of
plays
D) preferred living in
Southwark to
Shoreditch
E) was little known as an actor though he was
probably acting
99. We understand from the
passage that in the late 16th century—-.
A) it was illegal to hold theatrical
performances on religious days
B) Shoreditch and
Southwark were
heavily populated, commercial districts
C) there was apparently a great deal of public
interest in the theatres
D) the popularity of Alleyn
and Burbage was
already on the decline
E) working conditions in the theatres varied
enormously
100. it
was clear frorm the
passage that, for Shakespeare, they years in
London up to 1592 —.
A) were times of hardship and uncertainty
B) were a period of widespread public
recognition
C) marked a tuming
point in his life
D) brought many great changes and opportunities
E) were the period during which he established a
lifelong friendship with
Alleyn and
Burbage
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