Task 1: Reading Comprehension Part 1
Reading Comprehension For No. 1-10
The
Creators of Grammar
No student of
a foreign language needs to be told that grammar is complex. By changing word sequences and by adding a
range of auxiliary verbs and suffixes, we are able to communicate tiny variations
in meaning. We can turn a statement into
a question, state whether an action has taken place or is soon to take place,
and perform many other word tricks to convey subtle differences in meaning. Nor is this complexity inherent to the
English language. All languages, even
those of so-called 'primitive' tribes have clever grammatical components. The Cherokee pronoun system, for example, can
distinguish between 'you and I', 'several other people and I' and 'you, another
person and I'. In English, all these
meanings are summed up in the one, crude pronoun 'we'. Grammar is universal and plays a part in
every language, no matter how widespread it is.
So the question which has baffled many linguists is - who created
grammar?
At first, it
would appear that this question is impossible to answer. To find out how grammar is created, someone
needs to be present at the time of a language's creation, documenting its
emergence. Many historical linguists are
able to trace modern complex languages back to earlier languages, but in order
to answer the question of how complex languages are actually formed, the
researcher needs to observe how languages are started from scratch. Amazingly, however, this is possible.
Some of the
most recent languages evolved due to the Atlantic slave trade. At that time, slaves from a number of
different ethnicities were forced to work together under colonizer's rule. Since they had no opportunity to learn each
other's languages, they developed a make-shift language called a pidgin. Pidgins are strings of words copied from the
language of the landowner. They have
little in the way of grammar, and in many cases it is difficult for a listener
to deduce when an event happened, and who did what to whom. [A] Speakers
need to use circumlocution in order to make their meaning understood. [B] Interestingly,
however, all it takes for a pidgin to become a complex language is for a group
of children to be exposed to it at the time when they learn their mother
tongue. [C] Slave children did not simply copy the strings of words uttered by
their elders, they adapted their words to create a new, expressive language. [D] It
included standardised word orders and grammatical markers that existed in
neither the pidgin language, nor the language of the colonizers.
Complex grammar systems which emerge from pidgins are termed creoles, and they
are invented by children.
Further
evidence of this can be seen in studying sign languages for the deaf. Sign languages are not simply a series of
gestures; they utilise the same grammatical machinery that is found in spoken
languages. Moreover, there are many
different languages used worldwide. The creation of one such language was
documented quite recently in Nicaragua. Previously, all deaf people were
isolated from each other, but in 1979 a new government introduced schools for
the deaf. Although children were taught
speech and lip reading in the classroom, in the playgrounds they began to
invent their own sign system, using the gestures that they used at home. It was basically a pidgin. Each child used the signs differently, and
there was no consistent grammar.
However, children who joined the school later, when this inventive sign
system was already around, developed a quite different sign language. Although it was based on the signs of the
older children, the younger children's language was more fluid and compact, and
it utilised a large range of grammatical devices to clarify meaning. What is more, all the children used the signs
in the same way. A new creole was born.
Some
linguists believe that many of the world's most established languages were
creoles at first. The English past tense
–ed ending may have evolved from the verb 'do'.
'It ended' may once have been 'It end-did'. Therefore it would appear that even the most
widespread languages were partly created by children. Children appear to have innate grammatical
machinery in their brains, which springs to life when they are first trying to
make sense of the world around them.
Their minds can serve to create logical, complex structures, even when
there is no grammar present for them to copy.
1.
In
paragraph 1, why does the writer include information about the Cherokee
language?
A. To show how simple, traditional
cultures can have complicated grammar structures (correct)
B. To show how English grammar differs from
Cherokee grammar
C. To prove that complex grammar structures
were invented by the Cherokees.
D. To demonstrate how difficult it is to learn
the Cherokee language
2.
What can be inferred about the slaves' pidgin
language?
A. It contained complex grammar.
A. It contained complex grammar.
B. It was based on many different languages.
C. It was difficult to understand, even among
slaves. (correct)
D. It was created by the land-owners.
3.
All
the following sentences about Nicaraguan sign language are true EXCEPT:
A. The language has been created since 1979.
A. The language has been created since 1979.
B. The
language is based on speech and lip reading. (correct)
C. The language incorporates signs which
children used at home.
D. The language was perfected by younger
children.
4.
In
paragraph 3, where can the following sentence be placed?
“It included standardised word orders
and grammatical markers that existed in neither the pidgin language, nor the
language of the colonizers.”
A . [A]
B . [B]
C . [C]
D . [D] (correct)
5.
‘From scratch' in paragraph 2 is closest
in meaning to:
A. from the very beginning (correct)
B. in simple cultures
C. by copying something else
D. by using written information
6.
'Make-shift' in paragraph 3 is closest in meaning
to:
A complicated and expressive
A complicated and expressive
B simple and temporary (correct)
C extensive and diverse
D private and personal
7.
Which
sentence is closest in meaning to the highlighted sentence?
“Grammar is universal and plays a part in
every language, no matter how widespread it is.”
A. All languages, whether they are spoken by a few people or a lot of people, contain grammar. (correct)
A. All languages, whether they are spoken by a few people or a lot of people, contain grammar.
B. Some languages include a lot of grammar,
whereas other languages contain a little.
C. Languages which contain a lot of grammar
are more common that languages that contain a little.
D. The grammar of all languages is the same,
no matter where the languages evolved.
8.
All
of the following are features of the new Nicaraguan sign language EXCEPT:
A. All children used the same gestures to show
meaning.
B. The meaning was clearer than the previous
sign language.
C. The hand movements were smoother and
smaller.
D. New gestures were created for everyday
objects and activities. (correct)
9.
Which
idea is presented in the final paragraph?
A. English was probably once a creole. (correct)
B. The English past tense system is
inaccurate.
C. Linguists have proven that English was
created by children.
D. Children say English past tenses
differently from adults.
10. Look at the word 'consistent' in
paragraph 4. This word could best be replaced by which of the
following?Correct! Correct
A. natural
B. predictable
C. imaginable
D. uniform (correct)
Reading Comprehension For No. 11-20
Robert
Capa
Robert Capa is a name that has for
many years been synonymous with war photography.
Born in Hungary in 1913 as Friedmann
Endre Ernő, Capa was forced to leave his native country after his involvement
in anti government protests. Capa had originally wanted to become a writer, but
after his arrival in Berlin had first found work as a photographer. He later
left Germany and moved to France due to the rise in Nazism. He tried to find
work as a freelance journalist and it was here that he changed his name to
Robert Capa, mainly because he thought it would sound more American.
In 1936, after the breakout of the
Spanish Civil war, Capa went to Spain and it was here over the next three years
that he built his reputation as a war photographer. It was here too in 1936
that he took one of his most famous pictures, The Death of a Loyalist Soldier.
One of Capa’s most famous quotes was 'If your pictures aren't good enough,
you're not close enough.' And he took his attitude of getting close to the
action to an extreme. His photograph, The Death of a Loyalist Soldier is a
prime example of this as Capa captures the very moment the soldier falls.
However, many have questioned the authenticity of this photograph, claiming
that it was staged.
When World war II broke out, Capa was in New
York, but he was soon back in Europe covering the war for Life magazine. Some
of his most famous work was created on 6th June 1944 when he swam ashore with
the first assault on Omaha Beach in the D-Day invasion of Normandy. Capa, armed
only with two cameras, took more than one hundred photographs in the first hour
of the landing, but a mistake in the darkroom during the drying of the film
destroyed all but eight frames. It was the images from these frames however
that inspired the visual style of Steven Spielberg's Oscar winning movie
‘Saving Private Ryan’. When Life magazine published the photographs, they
claimed that they were slightly out of focus, and Capa later used this as the
title of his autobiographical account of the war.
Capa’s private life was no less dramatic. He
was friend to many of Hollywood’s directors, actors and actresses. In 1943 he
fell in love with the wife of actor John Austin. His affair with her lasted
until the end of the war and became the subject of his war memoirs. He was at
one time lover to actress Ingrid Bergman. Their relationship finally ended in
1946 when he refused to settle in Hollywood and went off to Turkey.
In 1947 Capa was among a group of
photojournalists who founded Magnum Photos. This was a co-operative
organisation set up to support photographers and help them to retain ownership
of the copyright to their work.
Capa went on to document many other wars. He
never attempted to glamorise war though, but to record the horror. He once
said, "The desire of any war photographer is to be put out of
business."
Capa died as he had lived. After promising not
to photograph any more wars, he accepted an assignment to go to Indochina to
cover the first Indochina war. On May 25th 1954 Capa was accompanying a French
regiment when he left his jeep to take some photographs of the advance and
stepped on a land mine. He was taken to a nearby hospital, still clutching his
camera, but was pronounced dead on arrival. He left behind him a testament to
the horrors of war and a standard for photojournalism that few others have been
able to reach.
Capa’s legacy has lived on though and
in 1966 his brother Cornell founded the International Fund for Concerned
Photography in his honor. There is also a Robert Capa Gold Medal, which is
given to the photographer who publishes the best photographic reporting from
abroad with evidence of exceptional courage. But perhaps his greatest legacy of
all are the haunting images of the human struggles that he captured.
11. Why did Capa change his name?
A. To hide his identity
A. To hide his identity
B. Because he had been involved in protests
C. To sound more American (correct)
D. Because he had to leave Hungary
12. Capa originally wanted to be
A.
A photojournalist
B. A writer (correct)
C.
American
D.
A protestor
13. Capa went to Spain to
A.
fight in the civil war.
B.
build his reputation.
C.
have a holiday.
D. take photographs. (correct)
14. Capa’s famous picture Death of a Loyalist
Soldier
A.
was taken by someone else.
B.
was definitely genuine.
C.
wasn’t even taken in Spain.
D. cannot be proven genuine or staged. (correct)
15. When World War II broke out Capa
A.
went to New York.
B.
swam ashore on Omaha Beach.
C. went to Europe. (correct)
D.
went to Normandy.
16. A mistake meant that
A.
only one hundred of Capa’s photographs were published.
B.
Capa lost both of his two cameras.
C.
Capa’s images inspired an Oscar winning movie.
D. Most of Capa’s images of the D-Day
landing were destroyed. (correct)
17. Capa’s private life was
A.
less dramatic than his professional life.
B.
spent mostly in Hollywood.
C. very glamorous. (correct)
D.
spent in Turkey.
18. Capa wanted his work to
A.
be very famous.
B.
show how glamorous war can be.
C. show the true horror of war. (correct)
D.
make lots of money.
19. Which sentence best paraphrases
paragraph 5?
A.
Capa had a tragic private life and was never able to settle down and find
happiness.
B. Despite having many good friends
and lovers, Capa always put his work first. (correct)
C.
Capa wanted to make friends with important people in Hollywood so that he could
move into the movie industry.
D.
Capa’s private life was very complicated. He could not choose between the two
women he loved, so he went off to work in Turkey.
20. Which sentence best paraphrases paragraph
4?
A.
Capa never tried to avoid danger. He risked his life to take photographs of the
D-Day invasion, but then destroyed most of them.
B. Capa took some of his most famous
photographs during the D-Day invasion, but most were tragically destroyed in an
accident. (correct)
C.
Capa only kept the best eight D-Day photographs as the others were out of
focus. These inspired the visual style of a Hollywood film.
D.
Capa left Europe when the war broke out and went to take his most famous
photographs of the D-Day invasion.
Reading Comprehension For No. 21-25
Smart
Energy
The
next few decades will see great changes in the way energy is supplied and
used. In some major oil producing
nations, 'peak oil' has already been reached, and there are increasing fears of
global warming. Consequently, many
countries are focusing on the switch to a low carbon economy. This transition
will lead to major changes in the supply and use of electricity. [A] Firstly, there will be an increase in
overall demand, as consumers switch from oil and gas to electricity to power
their homes and vehicles. [B] Secondly,
there will be an increase in power generation, not only in terms of how much is
generated, but also how it is generated, as there is growing electricity
generation from renewable sources. [C] There is also likely more electricity
generation centres, as households and communities take up the opportunity to
install photovoltaic cells and small scale wind turbines. To meet these
challenges, countries are investing in Smart Grid technology. [D] This system aims to provide the
electricity industry with a better understanding of power generation and
demand, and to use this information to create a more efficient power network.
Smart
Grid technology basically involves the application of a computer system to the
electricity network. The computer system
can be used to collect information about supply and demand and improve
engineer's ability to manage the system.
With better information about electricity demand, the network will be
able to increase the amount of electricity delivered per unit generated,
leading to potential reductions in fuel needs and carbon emissions. Moreover, the computer system will assist in
reducing operational and maintenance costs.
Smart
Grid technology offers benefits to the consumer too. They will be able to collect real-time
information on their energy use for each appliance. Varying tariffs throughout the day will give
customers the incentive to use appliances at times when supply greatly exceeds
demand, leading to great reductions in bills.
For example, they may use their washing machines at night. Smart meters can also be connected to the
internet or telephone system, allowing customers to switch appliances on or off
remotely. Furthermore, if houses are fitted
with the apparatus to generate their own power, appliances can be set to run
directly from the on-site power source, and any excess can be sold to the grid.
With
these changes comes a range of challenges.
The first involves managing the supply and demand. Sources of renewable energy, such as wind,
wave and solar, are notoriously unpredictable, and nuclear power, which is also
set to increase as nations switch to alternative energy sources, is inflexible. With oil and gas, it is relatively simple to
increase the supply of energy to match the increasing demand during peak times
of the day or year. With alternative
sources, this is far more difficult, and may lead to blackouts or system
collapse. Potential solutions include
investigating new and efficient ways to store energy and encouraging consumers
to use electricity at off-peak times.
A
second problem is the fact that many renewable power generation sources are
located in remote areas, such as windy uplands and coastal regions, where there
is currently a lack of electrical infrastructure. New infrastructures therefore must be
built. Thankfully, with improved smart
technology, this can be done more efficiently by reducing the reinforcement or
construction costs.
Although
Smart Technology is still in its infancy, pilot schemes to promote and test it
are already underway. Consumers are
currently testing the new smart meters which can be used in their homes to
manage electricity use. There are also a
number of demonstrations being planned to show how the smart technology could
practically work, and trials are in place to test the new electrical
infrastructure. It is likely that
technology will be added in 'layers', starting with 'quick win' methods which
will provide initial carbon savings, to be followed by more advanced systems at
a later date. Cities are prime
candidates for investment into smart energy, due to the high population density
and high energy use. It is here where
Smart Technology is likely to be promoted first, utilising a range of sustainable
power sources, transport solutions and an infrastructure for charging
electrically powered vehicles. The
infrastructure is already changing fast.
By the year 2050, changes in the energy supply will have transformed our
homes, our roads and our behaviour.
21. According to paragraph 1, what has
happened in some oil producing countries?
A.They
are unwilling to sell their oil any more.
B. They are not producing as much oil as they used to. (correct)
C. The supply of oil is unpredictable.
B. They are not producing as much oil as they used to. (correct)
C. The supply of oil is unpredictable.
D.
Global warming is more sever here than in other countries.
22. Where in paragraph 1 can the following
sentence be placed?
“There is also likely more electricity generation centres, as households and communities take up the opportunity to install photovoltaic cells and small scale wind turbines.”
“There is also likely more electricity generation centres, as households and communities take up the opportunity to install photovoltaic cells and small scale wind turbines.”
A.
[A]
B. [B]
C. [C] (correct)
D. [D]
B. [B]
C. [C] (correct)
D. [D]
23. Which of the following is NOT a benefit of
Smart Grid technology to consumers?
A.
It can reduce their electricity bills.
B.
It can tell them how much energy each appliance is using.
C.
It can allow them to turn appliances on and off when they are not at home.
D. It can reduce the amount of energy
needed to power appliances. (correct)
24. According to paragraph 4, what is the problem
with using renewable sources of power?
A.
They do not provide much energy.
B. They often cause system failure and blackouts.
C. They do not supply a continuous flow of energy.
D. They can't be used at off-peak times. (correct)
B. They often cause system failure and blackouts.
C. They do not supply a continuous flow of energy.
D. They can't be used at off-peak times.
25. In paragraph 5, what can be inferred about cities
in the future?
A.
More people will be living in cities in the future than nowadays.
B. People in cities will be using cars and buses powered by electricity. (correct)
C. All buildings will generate their own electricity.
D. Smart Grid technology will only be available in cities.
B. People in cities will be using cars and buses powered by electricity. (correct)
C. All buildings will generate their own electricity.
D. Smart Grid technology will only be available in cities.
Soucre :
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https://www.examenglish.com/TOEFL/TOEFL_reading1.htm
https://www.examenglish.com/TOEFL/toefl_reading.htm
https://www.examenglish.com/TOEFL/TOEFL_reading1.htm
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Some linguists believe that the earliest language were no less complex.
BalasHapusGrammar is not a complex thing. Lynn Business Tutoring of Boca Raton . Reading comprehension exercise is great
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