TOEFL READING PRACTICE WITH ANSWERS
TOEFL 12 (READING PASSAGE 1)
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Question
1-10
A
seventeenth-century theory of burning proposed that anything that burns
must contain material that the theorists called "phlogiston."
Burning was explained as the release of phlogiston from the combustible
material to the air. Air was thought essential, since it had to provide a
home for the released phlogiston. There would be a limit to the phlogiston
transfer, since a given volume of air could absorb only so much phlogiston.
When the air had become saturated, no additional amounts of phlogiston
could leave the combustible substance, and the burning would stop. Burning
would also stop when the combustible substance was emptied of all its
phlogiston.
Although
the phlogiston theory was self-consistent, it was awkward because it
required that imaginative, even mysterious, properties be ascribed to
phlogiston. Phlogiston was elusive. No one had ever isolated it and
experimentally determined its properties. At times it seemed to show a negative
weight: the residue left after burning weighed more than the material
before burning. This was true, for example, when magnesium burned. Sometimes
phlogiston seemed to show a positive weight, when, for example, wood
burned, the ash weighed less than the starting material. And since so
little residue was left when alcohol, kerosene, or high-grade coal burned,
these obviously different materials were thought to be pure or nearly pure
phlogiston.
In
the eighteenth century, Antoine Lavoisier, on the basis of careful experimentation,
was led to
propose
a different theory of burning, one that required a constituent of air-
later shown to be oxygen- for combustion. Since the weight of the oxygen is
always added, the weight of the products of combustion, including the evolved
gases, would always be greater than the weight of the starting material.
Lavoisier's
interpretation was more reasonable and straightforward than that of the
phlogiston theorists. The phlogiston theory, always clumsy, became suspect,
eventually fell into scientific disrepute, and was replaced by new ideas.
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1
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What does the
passage mainly discuss?
(A) The
chemical composition of phlogiston.
(B) Attempts to
explain what happens when materials burn.
(C) Limitations
of seventeenth-century scientific theories.
(D) The
characteristics of the residue left after fires.
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2
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The word "it" in line 4 refers
to
(A) burning
(B) phlogiston
(C) combustible material
(D) air
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3
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The "phlogiston transfer"
mentioned in line 5 is a term used to describe the
(A) natural limits on the total volume of
phlogiston
(B) absence of phlogiston in combustible material
(C) ability of phlogiston to slow
combustion
(D) release of phlogiston into the air
from burning material
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4
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The word "properties" in line
10 is closest in meaning to
(A) interpretations
(B) locations
(C) characteristics
(D) virtues
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5
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The phrase "ascribed to" in
line 10 is closest in meaning to
(A) analyzed and isolated in
(B) returned to their original condition
in
(C) assumed to be true of
(D) diagrammed with
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6
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The author mentions magnesium in line 14 as
an example of a substance that
(A) seemed to have phlogiston with a
negative weight
(B) leaves no residue after burning
(C) was thought to be made of nearly pure
phlogiston
(D)was thought to contain no phlogiston
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7
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The "different materials"
mentioned in line 17 were considered different because they
(A) required more heat to burn than other
substances did
(B) burned without leaving much residue
(C) were more mysterious than phlogiston
(D) contained limited amounts of
phlogiston
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8
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The word "constituent" in line
19 is closest in meaning to
(A) component
(B) opposite
(C) principle
(D) temperature
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9
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The
word "Since" in line 20 is closest in meaning to
(A)
later
(B)
because
(C)
during
(D)
although
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10
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Which
of the following is true of both the phlogiston theory of burning and
Lavoisier's theory of burning?
(A)
Both theories propose that total weight always increases during burning.
(B)
Both theories are considered to be reasonable and straightforward.
(C)
Both theories have difficulty explaining why residue remains after burning.
(D)Both
theories recognize that air is important to combustion.
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ANSWER KEY
1.
B
2.
D
3.
D
4.
C
5.
C
6.
A
7.
B
8.
A
9.
B
10. D
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