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2013年GMAT逻辑推理练习题(16)(2)

2013-03-02 

  10.  Country Y uses its scarce foreign-exchange reserves to buy scrap iron for recycling into steel. Although the steel thus produced earns more foreign exchange than it costs, that policy is foolish. Country Y’s own territory has vast deposits of iron ore, which can be mined with minimal expenditure of foreign exchange.Which of the following, if true, provides the strongest support for Country Y’s policy of buying scrap iron abroad?

  (A) The price of scrap iron on international markets rose significantly in 1987.

  (B) Country Y’s foreign-exchange reserves dropped significantly in 1987.

  (C) There is virtually no difference in quality between steel produced from scrap iron and that produced from iron ore.

  (D) Scrap iron is now used in the production of roughly half the steel used in the world today, and experts predict that scrap iron will be used even more extensively in the future.

  (E) Furnaces that process scrap iron can be built and operated in Country Y with substantially less foreign exchange than can furnaces that process iron ore.

  11.  Last year the rate of inflation was 1.2 percent, but for the current year it has been 4 percent. We can conclude that inflation is on an upward trend and the rate will be still higher next year.Which of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the conclusion above?

  (A) The inflation figures were computed on the basis of a representative sample of economic data rather than all of the available data.

  (B) Last year a dip in oil prices brought inflation temporarily below its recent stable annual level of 4 percent.

  (C) Increases in the pay of some workers are tied to the level of inflation, and at an inflation rate of 4 percent or above, these pay raises constitute a force causing further inflation.

  (D) The 1.2 percent rate of inflation last year represented a ten-year low.

  (E) Government intervention cannot affect the rate of inflation to any significant degree.

  12.  Because no employee wants to be associated with bad news in the eyes of a superior, information about serious problems at lower levels is progressively softened and distorted as it goes up each step in the management hierarchy. The chief executive is, therefore, less well informed about problems at lower levels than are his or her subordinates at those levels.The conclusion drawn above is based on the assumption that

  (A) problems should be solved at the level in the management hierarchy at which they occur

  (B) employees should be rewarded for accurately reporting problems to their superiors

  (C) problem-solving ability is more important at higher levels than it is at lower levels of the management hierarchy

  (D) chief executives obtain information about problems at lower levels from no source other than their subordinates

  (E) some employees are more concerned about truth than about the way they are perceived by their superiors

  13.  In the United States in 1986, the average rate of violent crime in states with strict gun-control laws was 645 crimes per 100,000 persons—about 50 percent higher than the average rate in the eleven states where strict gun-control laws have never been passed. Thus one way to reduce violent crime is to repeal strict gun control laws.Which of the following, if true, would most weaken the argument above?

  (A) The annual rate of violent crime in states with strict gun-control laws has decreased since the passage of those laws.

  (B) In states with strict gun-control laws, few individuals are prosecuted for violating such laws.

  (C) In states without strict gun-control laws, many individuals have had no formal training in the use of firearms.

  (D) The annual rate of nonviolent crime is lower in states with strict gun-control laws than in states without such laws.

  (E) Less than half of the individuals who reside in states without strict gun-control laws own a gun.

  14.  Corporate officers and directors commonly buy and sell, for their own portfolios, stock in their own corporations. Generally, when the ratio of such inside sales to inside purchases falls below 2 to 1 for a given stock, a rise in stock prices is imminent. In recent days, while the price of MEGA Corporation stock has been falling, the corporation’s officers and directors have bought up to nine times as much of it as they have sold.The facts above best support which of the following predictions?

  (A) The imbalance between inside purchases and inside sales of MEGA stock will grow even further.

  (B) Inside purchases of MEGA stock are about to cease abruptly.

  (C) The price of MEGA stock will soon begin to go up.

  (D) The price of MEGA stock will continue to drop, but less rapidly.

  (E) The majority of MEGA stock will soon be owned by MEGA’s own officers and directors.

  15.  The proposal to hire ten new police officers in Middletown is quite foolish. There is sufficient funding to pay the salaries of the new officers, but not the salaries of additional court and prison employees to process the increased caseload of arrests and convictions that new officers usually generate.Which of the following, if true, will most seriously weaken the conclusion drawn above?

  (A) Studies have shown that an increase in a city’s police force does not necessarily reduce crime.

  (B) When one major city increased its police force by 19 percent last year, there were 40 percent more arrests and 13 percent more convictions.

  (C) If funding for the new police officers’ salaries is approved, support for other city services will have to be reduced during the next fiscal year.

  (D) In most United States cities, not all arrests result in convictions, and not all convictions result in prison terms.

  (E) Middletown’s ratio of police officers to citizens has reached a level at which an increase in the number of officers will have a deterrent effect on crime.

  16.  A recent report determined that although only three percent of drivers on Maryland highways equipped their vehicles with radar detectors, thirty-three percent of all vehicles ticketed for exceeding the speed limit were equipped with them. Clearly, drivers who equip their vehicles with radar detectors are more likely to exceed the speed limit regularly than are drivers who do not.The conclusion drawn above depends on which of the following assumptions?

  (A) Drivers who equip their vehicles with radar detectors are less likely to be ticketed for exceeding the speed limit than are drivers who do not.

  (B) Drivers who are ticketed for exceeding the speed limit are more likely to exceed the speed limit regularly than are drivers who are not ticketed.

  (C) The number of vehicles that were ticketed for exceeding the speed limit was greater than the number of vehicles that were equipped with radar detectors.

  (D) Many of the vehicles that were ticketed for exceeding the speed limit were ticketed more than once in the time period covered by the report.

  (E) Drivers on Maryland highways exceeded the speed limit more often than did drivers on other state highways not covered in the report.

  17.  There is a great deal of geographical variation in the frequency of many surgical procedures—up to tenfold variation per hundred thousand between different areas in the numbers of hysterectomies, prostatectomies, and tonsillectomies.To support a conclusion that much of the variation is due to unnecessary surgical procedures, it would be most important to establish which of the following?

  (A) A local board of review at each hospital examines the records of every operation to determine whether the surgical procedure was necessary.

  (B) The variation is unrelated to factors (other than the surgical procedures themselves) that influence the incidence of diseases for which surgery might be considered.

  (C) There are several categories of surgical procedure (other than hysterectomies, prostatectomies, and tonsillectomies) that are often performed unnecessarily.

  (D) For certain surgical procedures, it is difficult to determine after the operation whether the procedures were necessary or whether alternative treatment would have succeeded.

  (E) With respect to how often they are performed unnecessarily, hysterectomies, prostatectomies, and tonsillectomies are representative of surgical procedures in general.

  18.    Researchers have found that when very overweight people, who tend to have relatively low metabolic rates, lose weight primarily through dieting, their metabolisms generally remain unchanged. They will thus burn significantly fewer calories at the new weight than do people whose weight is normally at that level. Such newly thin persons will, therefore, ultimately regain weight until their body size again matches their metabolic rate.The conclusion of the argument above depends on which of the following assumptions?

  (A) Relatively few very overweight people who have dieted down to a new weight tend to continue to consume substantially fewer calories than do people whose normal weight is at that level.

  (B) The metabolisms of people who are usually not overweight are much more able to vary than the metabolisms of people who have been very overweight.

  (C) The amount of calories that a person usually burns in a day is determined more by the amount that is consumed that day than by the current weight of the individual.

  (D) Researchers have not yet determined whether the metabolic rates of formerly very overweight individuals can be accelerated by means of chemical agents.

  (E) Because of the constancy of their metabolic rates, people who are at their usual weight normally have as much difficulty gaining weight as they do losing it.

  19.  In 1987 sinusitis was the most common chronic medical condition in the United States, followed by arthritis and high blood pressure, in that order.The incidence rates for both arthritis and high blood pressure increase with age, but the incidence rate for sinusitis is the same for people of all ages.The average age of the United States population will increase between 1987 and 2000.Which of the following conclusions can be most properly drawn about chronic medical conditions in the United States from the information given above?

  (A) Sinusitis will be more common than either arthritis or high blood pressure in 2000.

  (B) Arthritis will be the most common chronic medical condition in 2000.

  (C) The average age of people suffering from sinusitis will increase between 1987 and 2000.

  (D) Fewer people will suffer from sinusitis in 2000 than suffered from it in 1987.

  (E) A majority of the population will suffer from at least one of the medical conditions mentioned above by the year 2000.

  20.  Parasitic wasps lay their eggs directly into the eggs of various host insects in exactly the right numbers for any suitable size of host egg. If they laid too many eggs in a host egg, the developing wasp larvae would compete with each other to the death for nutrients and space. If too few eggs were laid, portions of the host egg would decay, killing the wasp larvae.Which of the following conclusions can properly be drawn from the information above?

  (A) The size of the smallest host egg that a wasp could theoretically parasitize can be determined from the wasp’s egg-laying behavior.

  (B) Host insects lack any effective defenses against the form of predation practiced by parasitic wasps.

  (C) Parasitic wasps learn from experience how many eggs to lay into the eggs of different host species.

  (D) Failure to lay enough eggs would lead to the death of the developing wasp larvae more quickly than would laying too many eggs.

  (E) Parasitic wasps use visual clues to calculate the size of a host egg.

  答案:

  1.     A2.     B3.     D4.     D5.     B

  6.     E7.     C8.     D9.     A10.   E

  11.   B12.   D13.   A14.   C15.   E

  16.   B17.   B18.   A19.   C20.   A

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