Q1: D
Q2: C
Q3: C
Q4: A
Q5: I can't know for sure without reading the passage but based on what I know about biofuels and fossil fuels I would assume the answer is D.
Q1: D
Q2: C
Q3: C
Q4: A
Q5: I can't know for sure without reading the passage but based on what I know about biofuels and fossil fuels I would assume the answer is D.
Answer: C. present a view of aquaculture that he seeks to dispute.
a) makes new experiments possible, influence problems that attract the interest of scientist, people controlling technology dictate what is researched.
b) Authority figures study social sciences to develop understanding on how society is organized to find answers to difficult questions. They are able ot understand dominant ideas in the society. This helps them in their rulership
Authority figures are less interested in natural science because this requires bringing improvement to natural sciences and supporting revolutionary ideas.
c) capitalism affects the science negatively in a way that research gets focused on specialized bodies of knowledge and not on the revolutionary ideas.
d) Einstein's breakthrough cannot be reduced simply to changes in wider cultural and ideological shifts as science doesn't develop on the basis of prevailing commom sense. Infact, science is use of abstraction to develop theories about laws of nature that are not apparent.
Explanation:
a) refer ot paragraph 3
b) refer to paragraph 4
c) refer to paragraph 4
d) refer to paragraph 5
C). Expanding populations of jellyfish are causing increasing problems in many parts of the world.
Explanation:
The thesis or the thesis statement primarily functions to present the main idea or key claim of the written work to the readers. In the given passage, the author expresses the key argument regarding the 'enlarging populations of jellyfish which are causing enhanced problems in numerous parts of the world.' It assists the readers in knowing the central argument that the author/speaker is going to discuss or throw light upon. Thus, option C is the correct answer.
a) makes new experiments possible, influence problems that attract the interest of scientist, people controlling technology dictate what is researched.
b) Authority figures study social sciences to develop understanding on how society is organized to find answers to difficult questions. They are able ot understand dominant ideas in the society. This helps them in their rulership
Authority figures are less interested in natural science because this requires bringing improvement to natural sciences and supporting revolutionary ideas.
c) capitalism affects the science negatively in a way that research gets focused on specialized bodies of knowledge and not on the revolutionary ideas.
d) Einstein's breakthrough cannot be reduced simply to changes in wider cultural and ideological shifts as science doesn't develop on the basis of prevailing commom sense. Infact, science is use of abstraction to develop theories about laws of nature that are not apparent.
Explanation:
a) refer ot paragraph 3
b) refer to paragraph 4
c) refer to paragraph 4
d) refer to paragraph 5
1. B. Webpage
2. C. Encyclopedia
3. B. Local newspaper
4. A. Textbook
5. D. All of the above
6. D. Periodicals
7. D. Newsweek
8. A. They have been reviewed and fact-checked for accuracy
9. C. A book about the creation of the Statue of Liberty
10. Both A and B
Explanation:
1. Print sources typically consist of magazines, textbooks, and newspapers. The oddball here is the webpage.
2. A is wrong because the newspaper may or may not have information on Zebras. A magazine would most likely not have any information. D is wrong because an atlas is a book full of maps. An encyclopedia would be the best answer because it gives information on a variety of topics.
3. A is wrong because a textbook wouldn't have the latest news. A reference book on parks wouldn't pertain to just the park project taking place in James city. And an encyclopedia would not have that specific park project. Therefore, the best answer is B. Local newspaper because it would have news on the project.
4. A newspaper, magazine, and scholarly journal are all periodical. A textbook is concrete.
5. You can use all of these as sources of information and they are all nonfiction
6. As stated in one of the above questions we see that periodicals are published at intervals. All other answers would be wrong.
7. If Kendra was looking for news on a particular current event she would want to read Newsweek. Vogue is a fashion magazine, Car and Driver is about cars, and Cat Fancy is about cats.
8. If a journal is proved reliable then it needed to be reviewed by someone right? So the first answer makes the most sense. All other answers are wrong because they aren't written by just teachers, they aren't written for just college students, and they don't contain outdated information.
9. A book about the creation of the Statue of Liberty would give the most history of the statue. A newspaper about restorations gives no history, a visitors brochure may not give history, and a dictionary entry of the word liberty doesn't make sense.
10. We can look back at the first question and see types of print sources, and they can be found in both libraries and bookstores!!
Hope this helps!!
- Kay
C). Expanding populations of jellyfish are causing increasing problems in many parts of the world.
Explanation:
The thesis or the thesis statement primarily functions to present the main idea or key claim of the written work to the readers. In the given passage, the author expresses the key argument regarding the 'enlarging populations of jellyfish which are causing enhanced problems in numerous parts of the world.' It assists the readers in knowing the central argument that the author/speaker is going to discuss or throw light upon. Thus, option C is the correct answer.
1. B. Webpage
2. C. Encyclopedia
3. B. Local newspaper
4. A. Textbook
5. D. All of the above
6. D. Periodicals
7. D. Newsweek
8. A. They have been reviewed and fact-checked for accuracy
9. C. A book about the creation of the Statue of Liberty
10. Both A and B
Explanation:
1. Print sources typically consist of magazines, textbooks, and newspapers. The oddball here is the webpage.
2. A is wrong because the newspaper may or may not have information on Zebras. A magazine would most likely not have any information. D is wrong because an atlas is a book full of maps. An encyclopedia would be the best answer because it gives information on a variety of topics.
3. A is wrong because a textbook wouldn't have the latest news. A reference book on parks wouldn't pertain to just the park project taking place in James city. And an encyclopedia would not have that specific park project. Therefore, the best answer is B. Local newspaper because it would have news on the project.
4. A newspaper, magazine, and scholarly journal are all periodical. A textbook is concrete.
5. You can use all of these as sources of information and they are all nonfiction
6. As stated in one of the above questions we see that periodicals are published at intervals. All other answers would be wrong.
7. If Kendra was looking for news on a particular current event she would want to read Newsweek. Vogue is a fashion magazine, Car and Driver is about cars, and Cat Fancy is about cats.
8. If a journal is proved reliable then it needed to be reviewed by someone right? So the first answer makes the most sense. All other answers are wrong because they aren't written by just teachers, they aren't written for just college students, and they don't contain outdated information.
9. A book about the creation of the Statue of Liberty would give the most history of the statue. A newspaper about restorations gives no history, a visitors brochure may not give history, and a dictionary entry of the word liberty doesn't make sense.
10. We can look back at the first question and see types of print sources, and they can be found in both libraries and bookstores!!
Hope this helps!!
- Kay
O First Amendment right of newspapers and other public media to publish articles believed to be accurate
A protection in the Fifth Amendment where a person can refuse to testify under oath in a court of law if doing
so might incriminate oneself in a crime
It will provide an instant answer!