Nama: Devi Rahma Yuni Nim: 1913211019 Tugas: B.inggris Section 3 Reading Comprehension
Nama: Devi Rahma Yuni Nim: 1913211019 Tugas: B.inggris Section 3 Reading Comprehension
Nama: Devi Rahma Yuni Nim: 1913211019 Tugas: B.inggris Section 3 Reading Comprehension
Nim : 1913211019
Tugas : B.inggris
Section 3
Reading Comprehension
Time : approximately 55 minutes 50 questions
In this section you will read several passages. Each one is followed by several questions
about it. For questions 1-50 you are to choose the one best answer, (A), (B), (C), or (D), to
each question. Then, on your answer sheet, find the number of the question and fill in the
space that corresponds to the letter of the answer you have chosen.
Answer all questions following a passage on the basis of what is stated or implied in that
passage.
The railroad was not the first institution to impose regularity on society, or to draw
attention to the importance of precise timekeeping. Fos as long as merchants have set out
their wares at daybreak and communal festivities have been celebrated, people have been in
rough agreement with their neighbors as to the time of day. The value of this tradition is
today more apparent than ever. Were it not for public acceptance of a single yardstick of
time, social life would be unbearably chaotic; the massive daily transfers of goods, services,
and information would proceed in fits and starts; the very fabric of modern society would
begin to unravel.
Example I
(A) In modern society we must make more time for our neighbors. A B C D
(B) The traditions of society are timeless.
(C) An accepted way of measuring time is essential for the smooth functioning of society.
(D) Society jugdes people by the times at which they conduct certain activties.
The main idea of the passage is that societies need to agree about how time is to be measured
in order to function smoothly. Therefore, you should choose (C),
Example II
A B C D
(A) The pratice of starting the business day at dawn.
(B) Friendly relations between neighbors.
(C) The railroad’s reliance on time scheules.
(D) People’s agreement on the measurement of time.
The phrase “this tradition” refers to the preceding clause, “people have been in rough
agreement with their neighbors as to the time of day. “ therefore, you should choose (D).
Line (5) All mammals feed their young. Beluga whale mothers,for example,
nurse their calves for some twenty months, until they are about to give birth
again and their young are able to find their own food. The behavior of feeding
of the young is built into the reproductive system. It is a nonelective part of
parental care and the defining feature of a mammal, the most important thing
that mammals -- wheter marsupials, platypuses, spiny anteaters, or placental
mammals – have in common.
(10) But not all animal parents, even those that tend their offspring to the
point of hatching or birth, feed their young. Most egg-guarding fish do not, for
the simple reason that their young are so much smaller than the parents and eat
food that is also much smaller than the food eaten by adults. In reptiles,
crocodile mother protects her young after they have hatched and takes them
down to the water, where they will find food, but she does not actually feed
them. Few insects feed their young after hatching, but some make other
arranggement, provisioning their cells and nests with caterpillars and spiders
that they have paralyzed with their venom and stored in
(15) a state of suspended animation so that their larvae might have a supply of fresh
food when they hacth.
(20) For animals other than mammals, then, feeding is not intrinsic to
parental care. Animal add it to their reproductive strategis to give them an edge
in their lifelong quest for descedants. The most vulnerable moment in any
animal’s life is when it first finds itself completely on its own, when it must
forage and fend for itself. Feeding postpones that moment until a young animal
has grown to such a size that it is better able to cope. Young that are fed by their
parents become nutrionally indepedent at a much greater fraction of their full
adult size. And in the meantime those young are shielded againts the vagaries of
fluctuating of difficult-to-find supplies. Once a species
(25) does take the step of feeding its young, the young become totally dependent on
the extra effort. If both parents are removed, the young generally do no survive.
1. What does the passage mainly discuss ?
(A) The care that various animals give to their offspring.
(B) The difficulties young animal face in obtaining food.
(C) The methods that mammals use to nurse their young.
(D) The importance among young mammals of becoming indepedent.
Line (5) The woodcut had been used in china from the fifth century A.D for applying
patterns to textiles. The process was not introduced into europa until the fourteenth
century, first for textile decoration and then for printing on paper. Woodcuts are
created by a relief process; first the artist takes a block of wood, which has been
sawed paralell to the grain, covers it with a white ground, and then draws the image
(10) in ink. The background is carved away, leaving the design area slighty raised. The
woodblock is inked, and the ink adheres to the raised image. It is then transferred to
damp paper either by hand or with a printing press.
Engraving, which grew out of the goldsmith’s art, originated in germany and
northem italy in the middle of the fifteenth century.
(15) It is an intaglio process (from italian intagliare, “to carve”). The image is incised into
a highly polished metal plate, usually copper, with a cutting instrument or burin. The
artist inks the plate and wipes it clean so that somme ink remains in the incised
grooves. An impression is made on damp paper in a printing press, with sufficient
pressure being applied so that the paper picks up the ink.
(20) Both woodcut and engraving have distinctive characteristics. Engraving lends
itself to subtle modeling and shading through the use of line lines. Hatching and cross-
hatchimg determine the degreeof light and shade in a print. Woodcuts tend to be more
linear, with sharper contracts between light and dar. Printmaking is well suited to the
production of multiple images. A set of multiples is called an edition. Both
(25) methods can yield several hundred good-quality prints before the original block or
plate begins to show signs of wear. Mass production of prints in the sixteenth century
made images available, at a lower cost to a much broader public than before.
The first peoples to inhabit what today is the southeastern united states
sustained themselves as hunters and gathers. Sometimes early in the first millenium
A.D, however, they began to cultivate corn and other crops. Gradually, as they
became more skilled at gardening, they settled into permanent villages and developed
a rich
(5) culture, characterized by the great earthen mounds they erected as monumentst
to their gods and as tombs for their distingquisshed dead. Most of these early mound
builders were part of the adena-hopewell culture, which had its beginnings near the
ohio river and takes its name from sites in ohio. The culture spread southward into the
present-day states of louisiana, alabama, georgia, and florida. Its peoples became
(10) great traders, bartering jewellery, pottery, animal pelts, tools, and other goods
along extensive trading networks that stretched up and down eastern north america
and as far west as the rocky mountains.
About A.D. 400 the hopewell culture fell into decay. Over the next centuries,
it was supplanted by another culture, the missippian, named after the river along
(15) which many of its earliest villages were located. This complex civilization dominated
the southeast from A.D. 700 until shortly before the europeans began arriving in the
sixteenth century. At the peak of its strength, about the year 1200, it was the most
advanced culture in north america. Like their hopewell predecessors, the
mississippians became highly skilled at growing food, although on a grander scale.
(20) they developed an improved strain of corn, which could survive in wet soil and a
relatively cool climate, and also learned to cultivate beans. Indeed, agriculture became
so important to the mississippians that it became closely associated with the sun ---
the guarantor of good crops. Many tribes called themselves “children of the sun” and
believed their omnipotent priest-chiefs were descendants of the great sun god.
(25) although most mississippians lived in small villages, many others inhabited large
towns. Most of these towns boasted at least one major flat-topped mound on which
stood a temple that contained a sacred flame. Only priest and those charged with
guarding the flame could enter the temples. The mounds also served as ceremonial
and trading sites, and at times they were used as burial grounds.
Overland transport in the united states was still extremely primitive in 1790.
Roads were few and short, usually extending from inland communities to the
nearest river town or seaport. Nearly all interstate commerce was carried out by
sailling ships
line (5) threshold of a new era of road development. Unable to finance road construction,
states turned for help to private companies, organized by merchants and land
speculators who had a personal interest in improved communications with the
interior. The pioneer in this move was the state of pennsylvania, which chartered a
company in 1792 to construct a turnpike, a road for the use of which a toll,
payment, is collected,
(10) from philadelphia to lancaster. The legistlature gave the company the authorityto
erect tollgates at points along the road where payment would be collected, though
it carefully regulated the rates. ( the states had unquestioned authority to regulate
private business in this period.)
The company built a gravel road within two years, and the succes of
the lancaster
(15) pike encouraged imitation. Northern states generally relied on private companies to
build their toll roads, but virginia constructed a network at public expense. Such
was the road building fever that by 1810 new york had some 1,500 miles of
turnpikes extending from the atlantic to lake erie
(20) passenger stagecoaches. The most common road freight carrier was the conestoga
wagon, a vehicle developed in the mid-eighteenth century by german immigrants
in the area around lancaster, pennsylvania. It featured large, broad wheels able to
negotiate all but the deepest ruts and holes, and its around bottom prevented the
freight from shifting on a hill. Convered with canvas and drawn by four to six
horses,
(25) the conestoga wagon rivaled the log cabin as the primary symbol of the frontier.
Passengers traveled in a variety of stagecoaches, the most common of which had
four benches, each holding three persons. It was only a platform on wheels, with no
springs; slender poles held up the top leather curtains kept out dust and rain.
32. Paragraph 1 discusses early road building in the united states mainly in terms of the
(A) Popularity of turnpikes
(B) Financing of new roads
(C) Development of the interior
(D) Laws governing road use
33. The word “primitive” in line 1 is closest in meaning to...
(A) Unsafe
(B) Unknown
(C) Inexpensive
(D) Undeveloped
34. In 1790 most roads connected towns in the interior of the country with...
(A) Other inland communities
(B) Towns in other states
(C) River towns or seaports
(D) Construction sites
35. The phrase “on the threshold of” in line 4 and 5 is closest in meaning to...
(A) In need of
(B) In place of
(C) At the start of
(D) With the purposes of
36. According to the passage, why did states want private companies to help with road
building?
(A) The states could not afford to build roads themselves
(B) The states were not as well equipped as private companies
(C) Private companies could complete roads faster than the states
(D) Private companies had greater knowledge of the interior
37. The word “it” in line 12 refers to...
(A) Legislature
(B) Company
(C) Authority
(D) Payment
38. The word “imitation” in line 15 is closest in meaning to...
(A) Investment
(B) Suggestion
(C) Increasing
(D) Copying
39. Virginia is mentioned as an example of a state that
(A) Built roads without tollgates
(B) Built roads with goverment money
(C) Completed 1,500 miles of turnpikes in on year
(D) Introduced new law restricting road use
40. The “large, broad wheels” of the conestoga wagon are mentioned in line 22 as an
example of a feature of wagons that was...
(A) Unusual in mid-eighteenth century vehicles
(B) First found in germany
(C) Effective on roads with uneven surfaces
(D) Responsible for frequent damage to freight
In death valley, california, one of the hottest, most arid places in north
america, there is much salt, and salt can damage rocks impressively. Inhabitants of
areas elsewhere, where streets and higways are salted to control ice, are familiar
with the
Line (5) of salt, but it is not the way salt destroys rocks. Salt breaks rocks apart
principally by a procces called crystal prying and wedging. This happens not by
soaking the rocks in salt water, but by moistening their bottoms with salt water.
Such conditions exist inmany areas along the eastern edge of central death valley.
There, salty water rises from the groundwater table by capillary action through tiny
spaces in sediment until
Most stones have capillary passages that suck salt water from the wet ground.
Death valley provides an ultra-dry atmosphere and high daily temperatures, which
promote evaporation and the formation of salt crystals along the cracks or other
openings within stones. These crystal grow as long as salt water is available. Like
(15) tree roots breaking up a sidewalk, the growing crystal exert pressure on the rock
and eventually pry the rock apart along planes of weakness, such as banding in
metamorphic rocks, bedding in sedimentary rocks, or preexisting or incipient
fractions, and along boundaries between individual mineral crystal or grains.
Besides crystal growth, the expansion of halite crystals (the same as everyday table
salt) by heating
(20) and of sulfates and similar salts by hydration can contribute additional stesses. A
rock durable enough to have withstood natural conditions for a very long time in
other areas could probably be shattered into small pieces by salt weathering within
a few generations.
The dominant salt in death valley is halite, or sodium chloride, but other salts,
(25) mostly carbonates and sulfates, also cause prying and wedging, as does ordinary
ice. Weathering by a variety of salts, though often subtle, is a worldwide
phenomenon. Not restricted to arid regions, intense salt weathering occurs mostly
in salt-rich places like the seashore, near the large saline lakes in the dry valleys of
antartica, and indesrt sections of australia, new zealand, and cenral asia.