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GRE Reading comprehension- Reasoning questions -1

Joseph Priestley, Sr. Verbal


Instructor

1. Gortland has long been narrowly self-sufficient in both grain and meat. However, as per capita
income in Gortland has risen toward the world average, per capita consumption of meat has also
risen toward the world average, and it takes several pounds of grain to produce one pound of
meat. Therefore, since per capita income continues to rise, whereas domestic grain production
will not increase, Gortland will soon have to import either grain or meat or both.
Which of the following is an assumption on which the argument depends?
(A) The total acreage devoted to grain production in Gortland will not decrease substantially.
(B) The population of Gortland has remained relatively constant during the countrys years of
growing prosperity.
(C) The per capita consumption of meat in Gortland is roughly the same across all income levels.
(D) In Gortland, neither meat nor grain is subject to government price controls.
(E) People in Gortland who increase their consumption of meat will not radically decrease their
consumption of grain.
2. In a certain wildlife park, park rangers are able to track the movements of many rhinoceroses
because those animals wear radio collars. When, as often happens, a collar slips off, it is put back
on. Putting a collar on a rhinoceros involves immobilizing the animal by shooting it with a
tranquilizer dart. Female rhinoceroses that have been frequently recollared have significant lower
fetility rate than uncollared females. Probably, therefore, some subtances in the tranquilizer
inhibit fertility.
Which of the following is an assumption on which the argument depends?
A. The dose of tranquilizer delivered by a tranquilizer dart is large enough to give the rangers
putting collars on rhinoceroses a generous margin of safety.
B. The fertility rate of uncollared female rhinoceroses in the park has been increasing in the past
few decades.
C. Any stress that female rhinoceroses may suffer as a result of being immobilized and handled
has little or no negative effect on their fertility.
D. The male rhinoceroses in the wildlife park do not lose their collars as often as the park's
female rhinoceroses do.

E. The tranquilizer used in immobilizing rhinoceroses is the same as the tranquilizer used in
working with other large mammals.
3. Traditionally, decision-making by managers that is reasoned step-by-step has been considered
preferable to intuitive decision-making. However, a recent study found that top managers used
intuition significantly more than did most middle- or lower-level managers. This confirms the
alternative view that intuition is actually more effective than careful, methodical reasoning.
The conclusion above is based on which of the following assumptions?
(A) Methodical, step-by-step reasoning is inappropriate for making many real-life management
decisions.
(B) Top managers have the ability to use either intuitive reasoning or methodical, step-by-step
reasoning in making decisions.
(C) The decisions made by middle- and lower-level managers can be made as easily by using
methodical reasoning as by using intuitive reasoning.
(D) Top managers use intuitive reasoning in making the majority of their decisions.
(E) Top managers are more effective at decision-making than middle- or lower-level managers.
4. A famous singer recently won a lawsuit against an advertising firm for using another singer in
a commercial to evoke the famous singers well-known rendition of a certain song. As a result of
the lawsuit, advertising firms will stop using imitators in commercials. Therefore, advertising
costs will rise, since famous singers services cost more than those of their imitators.
The conclusion above is based on which of the following assumptions?
(A) Most people are unable to distinguish a famous singers rendition of a song from a good
imitators rendition of the same song.
(B) Commercials using famous singers are usually more effective than commercials using
imitators of famous singers.
(C) The original versions of some well-known songs are unavailable for use in commercials.
(D) Advertising firms will continue to use imitators to mimic the physical mannerisms of famous
singers.
(E) The advertising industry will use well-known renditions of songs in commercials.

5. In order to increase profits during a prolonged slowdown in sales, the largest manufacturers of
automobiles in the United States have instituted record-setting price increases on all their
models. The manufacturers believe that this strategy will succeed, even though it is inconsistent
with the normal relationship between price and demand.
The manufacturers plan to increase profits relies on which of the following assumptions?

(A) Automobile manufacturers will, of necessity, raise prices whenever they introduce a new
model.
(B) The smaller automobile manufacturers will continue to take away a large percentage of
business from the largest manufacturers.
(C) The increased profit made on cars sold will more than compensate for any decline in sales
caused by the price increases.
(D) New safety restraints that will soon become mandatory for all new cars will not be very
costly for manufacturers to install.
(E) Low financing and extended warranties will attract many price-conscious consumers.
6. Within 20 years it will probably be possible to identify the genetic susceptibility an individual
may have toward any particular disease. Eventually, effective strategies will be discovered to
counteract each such susceptibility. Once these effective strategies are found, therefore, the
people who follow them will never get sick.
The argument above is based on which of the following assumptions?
(A) For every disease there is only one strategy that can prevent its occurrence.
(B) In the future, genetics will be the only medical specialty of any importance.
(C) All human sicknesses are in part the result of individuals genetic susceptibilities.
(D) All humans are genetically susceptible to some diseases.
(E) People will follow medical advice when they are convinced that it is effective.
7. A researcher discovered that people who have low levels of immune system activity tend to
score much lower on tests of mental health than do people with normal or high immune-system
activity. The researcher concluded from this experiment that the immune system protects against
mental illness as well as against physical disease.
The researcher conclusion depends on which of the following assumptions?
(A) High immune-system activity protects against mental illness better than normal immunesystem activity does.
(B) Mental illness is similar to physical disease in its effects on body systems.
(C) People with high immune-system activity cannot develop mental illness.
(D) Mental illness does not cause people's immune-system activity to decrease.
(E) Psychological treatment of mental illness is not as effective as is medical treatment.

8. Wood smoke contains dangerous toxins that cause changes in human cells. Because wood
smoke presents such a high health risk, legislation is needed to regulate the use of open-air fires
and wood-burning stoves.
Which of the following, if true, provides the most support for the argument above?
(A) The amount of dangerous toxins contained in wood smoke is much less than the amount
contained in an equal volume of automobile exhaust.
(B) Within the jurisdiction covered by the proposed legislation, most heating and cooking is done
with oil or natural gas.
(C) Smoke produced by coal-burning stoves is significantly more toxic than smoke from woodburning stoves.
(D) No significant beneficial effect on air quality would result if open-air fires were banned
within the jurisdiction covered by the proposed legislation.
(E) In valleys where wood is used as the primary heating fuel, the concentration of smoke results
in poor air quality.
9. Because postage rates are rising, Home Decorator magazine plans to maximize its profits by
reducing by one half the numbers of issues it publishes each year. The quality of articles, the
number of articles published per year, and the subscription price will not change. Market
research shows that neither subscribers nor advertisers will be lost if the magazines plan is
instituted.
Which of the following, if true, provides the strongest evidence that the magazines profits are
likely to decline if the plan is instituted?
(A) With the new postage rates, a typical issue under the proposed plan would cost about onethird more to mail than a typical current issue would.
(B) The majority of the magazines subscribers are less concerned about a possible reduction in
the quantity of the magazines articles than about a possible loss of the current high quality of its
articles.
(C) Many of the magazines long-time subscribers would continue their subscriptions even if the
subscription price were increased.
(D) Most of the advertisers that purchase advertising space in the magazine will continue to
spend the same amount on advertising per issue as they have in the past.
(E) Production costs for the magazine are expected to remain stable.
10. Often patients with ankle fractures that are stable, and thus do not require surgery, are given
follow-up x-rays because their orthopedists are concerned about possibly having misjudged the
stability of the fracture. When a number of follow-up x-rays were reviewed, however, all the
fractures that had initially been judged stable were found to have healed correctly. Therefore, it is
a waste of money to order follow-up x-rays of ankle fracture initially judged stable.
Which of the following, if true, most strengthens the argument?
A. Doctors who are general practitioners rather than orthopedists are less likely than orthopedists
to judge the stability of an ankle fracture correctly.

B. Many ankle injuries for which an initial x-ray is ordered are revealed by the x-ray not to
involve any fracture of the ankle.
C. X-rays of patients of many different orthopedists working in several hospitals were reviewed.
D. The healing of ankle fractures that have been surgically repaired is always checked by means
of a follow-up x-ray.
E. Orthopedists routinely order follow-up x-rays for fractures of bone other than ankle bones.
11 Manufacturers sometimes discount the price of a product to retailers for a promotion period

when the product is advertised to consumers. Such promotions often result in a dramatic increase
in amount of product sold by the manufacturers to retailers. Nevertheless, the manufacturers
could often make more profit by not holding the promotions.
Which of the following, if true, most strongly supports the claim above about the manufacturers'
profit?
(A) The amount of discount generally offered by manufacturers to retailers is carefully calculated
to represent the minimum needed to draw consumers' attention to the product.
(B) For many consumer products the period of advertising discounted prices to consumers is
about a week, not sufficiently long for consumers to become used to the sale price.
(C) For products that are not newly introduced, the purpose of such promotions is to keep the
products in the minds of consumers and to attract consumers who are currently using competing
products.
(D) During such a promotion retailers tend to accumulate in their warehouses inventory bought
at discount; they then sell much of it later at their regular price.
(E) If a manufacturer falls to offer such promotions but its competitor offers them, that
competitor will tend to attract consumers away from the manufacturer's product.
12. In Swartkans territory, archaeologists discovered charred bone fragments dating back one
million years. Analysis of the fragments, which came from a variety of animals, showed that they
had been heated to temperatures no higher than those produced in experimental campfires made
from branches of white stinkwood, the most common tree around Swartkans.
Which of the following, if true, would, together with the information above, provide the best
basis for the claim that the charred bone fragments are evidence of the use of fire by early
hominids?
(A) The white stinkwood tree is used for building material by the present-day inhabitants of
Swartkans.
(B) Forest fires can heat wood to a range of temperatures that occur in campfires.
(C) The bone fragments were fitted together by the archaeologists to form the complete skeletons
of several animals.

(D) Apart from the Swartkans discovery, there is reliable evidence that early hominids used fire
as many as 500,000 years ago.
(E) The bone fragments were found in several distinct layers of limestone that contained
primitive cutting tools known to have been used by early hominids.
13. Male bowerbirds construct elaborately decorated nests, or bowers. Basing their judgment on
the fact that different local populations of bowerbirds of the same species build bowers that
exhibit different building and decorative styles, researchers have concluded that the bowerbirds
building styles are a culturally acquired, rather than a genetically transmitted, trait.
Which of the following, if true, would most strengthen the conclusion drawn by the researchers?
(A) There are more common characteristics than there are differences among the bower-building
styles of the local bowerbird population that has been studied most extensively.
(B) Young male bowerbirds are inept at bower building and apparently spend years watching
their elders before becoming accomplished in the local bower style.
(C) The bowers of one species of bowerbird lack the towers and ornamentation characteristic of
the bowers of most other species of bowerbird.
(D) Bowerbirds are found only in New Guinea and Australia, where local populations of the
birds apparently seldom have contact with one another.
(E) It is well known that the song dialects of some songbirds are learned ratherthan transmitted
genetically
14. Many breakfast cereals are fortified with vitamin supplements. Some of these cereals provide
100 percent of the recommended daily requirement of vitamins. Nevertheless, a well-balanced
breakfast, including a variety of foods, is a better source of those vitamins than are such fortified
breakfast cereals alone.
Which of the following, if true, would most strongly support the position above?
(A) In many foods, the natural combination of vitamins with other nutrients makes those
vitamins more usable by the body than are vitamins added in vitamin supplements.
(B) People who regularly eat cereals fortified with vitamin supplements sometimes neglect to eat
the foods in which the vitamins occur naturally.
(C) Foods often must be fortified with vitamin supplements because naturally occurring vitamins
are removed during processing.
(D) Unprocessed cereals are naturally high in several of the vitamins that are usually added to
fortified breakfast cereals
(E) Cereals containing vitamin supplements are no harder to digest than similar cereals without
added vitamins

15. Because mining and refining nickels is costly, researchers have developed an alternative
method for extracting nickels using Streptanthus polygaloides, a plant that absorbs and stores

nickel from the soil as it grows. The researchers incinerated a crop of Streptanthus they grow in
nickel-rich soil. By chemically extracting nickel form the ash, they produced 100 pounds of
nickel per acre of land at a total cost per pound slightly above that of current mining.
Which of the following, if true, most strongly supports the conclusion that the use of
Streptanthus to extract nickel will be commercially adopted?
A. The season in which the researchers grew Streptanthus was an unusually favorable one, with
the right amount of precipitation to maximize the growth rate of Streptanthus.
B. Because lowering the concentration of nickel in the soil can make land much better for
agriculture in general, a plot in which Streptanthus has been grown and harvested can be sold for
substantially more than it cost
C. More air pollution is generated for each pound of nickel produced by extracting it from
Streptanthus than is generated using conventional mining and refining
D. The land on which the researchers planted Streptanthus was unusually free of the various
weeds that can compete with Streptanthus for water, nutrients, and sunlight.
E. It is extremely rare for soil to contain higher concentrations of nickel than the concentrations
present in the researchers experimental plot.

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