가장 최신 시험 기출문제 모음자료
IT업계에 종사하시는 분께 있어서 PSAT-Reading시험은 아주 중요한 시험입니다. PSAT-Reading시험을 패스하여 자격증을 취득하면 취직, 연봉협상, 승진, 이직 등에 큰 도움이 될수 있습니다. PSAT-Reading시험을 패스하여 자격증을 취득하시면 고객님께 많은 이로운 점을 가져다 드릴수 있기에 많은 분들께서 저희 PSAT-Reading덤프자료로 자격증 PSAT-Reading시험 응시준비를 하고 계십니다.
시험을 가장 쉽게 패스하는 방법
이렇게 중요한 PSAT-Reading시험인만큼 고객님께서도 시험에 관해 검색하다 저희 사이트까지 찾아오게 되었을것입니다. PSAT-Reading덤프를 공부하여 시험을 보는것은 고객님의 가장 현명한 선택입니다.
저희 PSAT-Reading덤프에 있는 문제와 답만 기억하시면 PSAT-Reading시험을 패스할수 있다고 굳게 믿고 있습니다. 시험불합격시 덤프비용 전액을 환불해드릴만큼 저희PSAT-Reading 덤프품질에 자신있습니다.
저희 덤프를 구매한다는것은
PSAT-Reading시험은 it인증 인기자격증을 취득하는 필수과목입니다.저희 사이트에서 제공해드리는 PSAT-Reading덤프는 높은 적중율로 업계에 알려져 있습니다. PSAT PSAT Certification덤프를 구매하시면 1년무료 업데이트서비스, 한국어 온라인상담 , 시험불합격시 덤프비용 환불 등 퍼펙트한 서비스를 제공해드리기에 시고 고객님께서는 안심하시고 PSAT-Reading덤프를 주문하셔도 됩니다.
구매후 PSAT-Reading덤프를 바로 다운: 결제하시면 시스템 자동으로 구매한 제품을 고객님 메일주소에 발송해드립니다.(만약 12시간이내에 덤프를 받지 못하셨다면 연락주세요.주의사항:스펨메일함도 꼭 확인해보세요.)
인증시험덤프의 장점
PSAT-Reading인증시험덤프를 구매하시면 장점이 아주 많습니다. 예를 들어 PSAT-Reading덤프에 있는 모든 문제를 마스트하면 PSAT PSAT Certification시험에 쉽게 합격하여 취직을 하거나 연봉인상,승진에 많은 도움이 되어드립니다.
다른 사람이 없는 자격증을 내가 가지고 있다는것은 실력을 증명해주는 수단입니다. PSAT-Reading시험유효자료는 널리 승인받는 자격증의 시험과목입니다. PSAT PSAT Certification덤프자료로 PSAT-Reading시험준비를 하시면 PSAT-Reading시험패스 난이도가 낮아지고 자격증 취득율이 높이 올라갑니다.자격증을 많이 취득하여 취업이나 승진의 문을 두드려 보시면 빈틈없이 닫혀있던 문도 활짝 열릴것입니다.
최신 PSAT Certification PSAT-Reading 무료샘플문제:
1. The following passage was written by John Janovec, an ecologist who has worked in the Los Amigos
watershed in Peru
The Amazonian wilderness harbors the greatest number of species on this planet and is an irreplaceable
resource for present and future generations. Amazonia is crucial for maintaining global climate and
genetic resources, and its forest and rivers provide vital sources of food, building materials,
pharmaceuticals, and water needed by wildlife and humanity. The Los Amigos watershed in the state of
Madre de Dios, southeastern Peru, is representative of the pristine lowland moist forest once found
throughout most of upper Amazonian South America. Threats to tropical forests occur in the form of
fishing, hunting, gold mining, timber extraction, impending road construction, and slash-and-burn
agriculture. The Los Amigos watershed, consisting of 1.6 million hectares (3.95 million acres), still offers
the increasingly scarce opportunity to study rainforest as it was before the disruptive encroachment of
modern human civilization. Because of its relatively pristine condition and the immediate need to justify it
as a conservation zone, this area deserves intensive, long-term projects aimed at botanical training,
ecotourism, biological inventory, and information synthesis. On July 24, 2001, the government of Peru
and the Amazon Conservation Association signed a contractual agreement creating the first long-term
permanently renewable conservation concession. To our knowledge this is the first such agreement to be
implemented in the world. The conservation concession protects 340,000 acres of old-growth Amazonian
forest in the Los Amigos watershed, which is located in southeastern Peru. This watershed protects the
eastern flank of Manu National Park and is part of the lowland forest corridor that links it to
Bahuaja-Sonene National Park. The Los Amigos conservation concession will serve as a mechanism for
the development of a regional center of excellence in natural forest management and biodiversity science.
Several major projects are being implemented at the Los Amigos Conservation Area. Louise Emmons is
initiating studies of mammal diversity and ecology in the Los Amigos area. Other projects involve studies
of the diversity of arthropods, amphibians, reptiles, and birds. Robin Foster has conducted botanical
studies at Los Amigos, resulting in the labeling of hundreds of plant species along two kilometers of trail in
upland and lowland forest. Michael Goulding is leading a fisheries and aquatic ecology program, which
aims to document the diversity of fish, their ecologies, and their habitats in the Los Amigos area and the
Madre de Dios watershed in general. With support from the Amazon Conservation Association, and in
collaboration with U.S. and Peruvian colleagues, the Botany of the Los Amigos project has been initiated.
At Los Amigos, we are attempting to develop a system of preservation, sustainability, and scientific
research; a marriage between various disciplines, from human ecology to economic botany, product
marketing to forest management. The complexity of the ecosystem will best be understood through a
multidisciplinary approach, and improved understanding of the complexity will lead to better management.
The future of these forests will depend on sustainable management and development of alternative
practices and products that do not require irreversible destruction. The botanical project will provide a
foundation of information that is essential to other programs at Los Amigos. By combining botanical
studies with fisheries and mammology, we will better understand plant/animal interactions. By providing
names, the botanical program will facilitate accurate communication about plants and the animals that
use them. Included in this scenario are humans, as we will dedicate time to people-plant interactions in
order to learn what plants are used by people in the Los Amigos area, and what plants could potentially
be used by people. To be informed, we must develop knowledge. To develop knowledge, we must collect,
organize, and disseminate information. In this sense, botanical information has conservation value.
Before we can use plant-based products from the forest, we must know what species are useful and we
must know their names. We must be able to identify them, to know where they occur in the forest, how
many of them exist, how they are pollinated and when they produce fruit (or other useful products). Aside
from understanding the species as they occur locally at Los Amigos, we must have information about their
overall distribution in tropical America in order to better understand and manage the distribution, variation,
and viability of their genetic diversity. This involves a more complete understanding of the species through
studies in the field and herbarium. In 1st paragraph, "genetic resources" refers to
A) plant seeds.
B) different races of people.
C) natural resources, such as oil.
D) diverse species of plants and animals.
E) cells that can be used in genetic cures for diseases
2. The depth and ______ of Lillian's performance was most noteworthy; she presented works from ragtime
to jazz to classical.
A) polish
B) articulation
C) intensity
D) duration
E) scope
3. Mathew ascended three flights of stairs--passed half-way down a long arched gallery--and knocked at
another old-fashioned oak door. This time the signal was answered. A low, clear, sweet voice, inside the
room, inquired who was waiting without? In a few hasty words Mathew told his errand. Before he had
done speaking the door was quietly and quickly opened, and Sarah Leeson confronted him on the
threshold, with her candle in her hand.
Not tall, not handsome, not in her first youth--shy and irresolute in manner--simple in dress to the utmost
limits of plainness--the lady's-maid, in spite of all these disadvantages, was a woman whom it was
impossible to look at without a feeling of curiosity, if not of interest. Few men, at first sight of her, could
have resisted the desire to find out who she was; few would have been satisfied with receiving for answer,
She is Mrs. Treverton's maid; few would have refrained from the attempt to extract some secret
information for themselves from her face and manner; and none, not even the most patient and practiced
of observers, could have succeeded in discovering more than that she must have passed through the
ordeal of some great suffering at some former period of her life. Much in her manner, and more in her face,
said plainly and sadly: I am the wreck of something that you might once have liked to see; a wreck that
can never be repaired--that must drift on through life unnoticed, unguided, unpitied--drift till the fatal shore
is touched, and the waves of Time have swallowed up these broken relics of me forever.
This was the story that was told in Sarah Leeson's face--this, and no more. No two men interpreting that
story for themselves, would probably have agreed on the nature of the suffering which this woman had
undergone. It was hard to say, at the outset, whether the past pain that had set its ineffaceable mark on
her had been pain of the body or pain of the mind. But whatever the nature of the affliction she had
suffered, the traces it had left were deeply and strikingly visible in every part of her face.
Her cheeks had lost their roundness and their natural color; her lips, singularly flexible in movement and
delicate in form, had faded to an unhealthy paleness; her eyes, large and black and overshadowed by
unusually thick lashes, had contracted an anxious startled look, which never left them and which piteously
expressed the painful acuteness of her sensibility, the inherent timidity of her disposition. So far, the
marks which sorrow or sickness had set on her were the marks common to most victims of mental or
physical suffering. The one extraordinary personal deterioration which she had undergone consisted in
the unnatural change that had passed over the color of her hair.
It was as thick and soft, it grew as gracefully, as the hair of a young girl; but it was as gray as the hair of an
old woman. It seemed to contradict, in the most startling manner, every personal assertion of youth that
still existed in her face. With all its haggardness and paleness, no one could have looked at it and
supposed for a moment that it was the face of an elderly woman. Wan as they might be, there was not a
wrinkle in her cheeks. Her eyes, viewed apart from their prevailing expression of uneasiness and timidity,
still preserved that bright, clear moisture which is never seen in the eyes of the old. The skin about her
temples was as delicately smooth as the skin of a child. These and other physical signs which never
mislead, showed that she was still, as to years, in the very prime of her life.
Sickly and sorrow-stricken as she was, she looked, from the eyes downward, a woman who had barely
reached thirty years of age. From the eyes upward, the effect of her abundant gray hair, seen in
connection with her face, was not simply incongruous--it was absolutely startling; so startling as to make it
no paradox to say that she would have looked most natural, most like herself if her hair had been dyed. In
her case, Art would have seemed to be the truth, because Nature looked like falsehood. What shock had
stricken her hair, in the very maturity of its luxuriance, with the hue of an unnatural old age? Was it a
serious illness, or a dreadful grief that had turned her gray in the prime of her womanhood? That question
had often been agitated among her fellow-servants, who were all struck by the peculiarities of her
personal appearance, and rendered a little suspicious of her, as well, by an inveterate habit that she had
of talking to herself. Inquire as they might, however, their curiosity was always baffled. Nothing more
could be discovered than that Sarah Leeson was, in the common phrase, touchy on the subject of her
gray hair and her habit of talking to herself, and that Sarah Leeson's mistress had long since forbidden
every one, from her husband downward, to ruffle her maid's tranquility by inquisitive questions.
What does the author mean with the statement "In her case, Art would have seemed to be the truth,
because Nature looked like falsehood"?
A) Nature made Sarah look like a falsehood rather like Art.
B) Artists would have had to modify Nature by painting her hair a different color than gray.
C) Artists would not have used Sarah for a pose unless it was from the eyes downward.
D) Normally Art is perceptibly copying that which is natural (Nature), and this is reversedin the case of
Sarah.
E) Usually women would have been presented in Art as natural as possible but in the case ofSarah, Art
would have made improvements to Nature.
4. Big earthquakes are naturally occurring events well outside the powers of humans to create or stop. An
earthquake is caused by a sudden slip on a fault. Stresses in the earth's outer layer push the side of the
fault together. The friction across the surface of the fault holds the rocks together so they do not slip
immediately when pushed sideways. Eventually enough stress builds up and the rocks slip suddenly,
releasing energy in waves that travel through the rock to cause the shaking that we feel during an
earthquake. Earthquakes typically originate several tens of miles below the surface of the earth. It takes
many years--decades to centuries--to build up enough stress to make a large earthquake, and the fault
may be tens to hundreds of miles long. The scale and force necessary to produce earthquakes are well
beyond our daily lives. Likewise, people cannot prevent earthquakes from happening or stop them once
they've started--giant nuclear explosions at shallow depths, like those in some movies, won't actually stop
an earthquake.
The two most important variables affecting earthquake damage are the intensity of ground shaking cased
by the quake and the quality of the engineering of structures in the region. The level of shaking, in turn, is
controlled by the proximity of the earthquake source to the affected region and the types of rocks that
seismic waves pass through en route (particularly those at or near the ground surface). Generally, the
bigger and closer the earthquake, the stronger the shaking. But there have been large earthquakes with
very little damage either because they caused little shaking or because the buildings were built to
withstand that shaking. In other cases, moderate earthquakes have caused significant damage either
because the shaking was locally amplified or more likely because the structures were poorly engineered.
The word fault means?
A) error
B) the place where two rock plates come together
C) criticize
D) volcanic activity
E) responsibility
5. Like Truman, who was never considered a major national figure until Roosevelt's death made him
president, Ford attained national prominence only after __ thrust him into the presidency.
A) public demand
B) popular acclaim
C) outside circumstances
D) personal ambition
E) political intrigue
질문과 대답:
| 질문 # 1 정답: D | 질문 # 2 정답: E | 질문 # 3 정답: D | 질문 # 4 정답: B | 질문 # 5 정답: C |




1295 분의 상품리뷰 


키를 찾아야해 -
시험문제가 변경될가봐 걱정했는데 다행이도 덤프가 유효해서 시험 잘봤어요.
ExamPassdump PSAT-Reading덤프자료에 있는 문제만 퍼펙트하게 달달달 외우시면 패스는 문제없는듯해요.