TOEFL READING PRACTICE WITH ANSWERS
TOEFL 14 (READING PASSAGE 1)
|
Question
1-12
The
Native Americans of northern California were highly skilled at basketry,
using the reeds, grasses, bards, and roots they found around them to
fashion articles of all sorts and sizes - not only trays, containers, and
cooking pots, but hats, boats, fish traps, baby carriers, and ceremonial objects.
Of
all these experts, none excelled the Pomo - a group who lived on or near
the coast during the 1800's, and whose descendants continue to live in
parts of the same region to the same region to this day. They made baskets
three feet in diameter and others no bigger than a thimble. The Pomo people
were masters of decoration. Some of their baskets were completely covered
with shell pendants; others with feathers that made the baskets' surfaces
as soft as the breasts of birds. Moreover, the Pomo people made use of more
weaving techniques than did their neighbors. Most groups made all their
basketwork by twining - the twisting of a flexible horizontal material,
called a weft, around stiffer vertical strands of material, the warp.
Others depended primarily on coiling - a process in which a continuous coil
of stiff material is held in the desired shape with tight wrapping of
flexible strands. Only the Pomo people used both processes with equal case
and frequency. In addition, they made use of four distinct variations on
the basic twining process, often employing more than one of them in a
single article.
Although
a wide variety of materials was available, the Pomo people used only a few.
The warp was always made of willow, and the most commonly used welt was
sedge root, a woody fiber that could easily be separated into strands no
thicker than a thread. For color, the Pomo people used the bark of redbud
for their twined work and dyed bullrush root for black in coiled work.
Though other materials were sometimes used, these four were the staples in
their finest basketry.
If
the basketry materials used by the Pomo people were limited, the designs
were amazingly varied. Every Pomo basketmaker knew how to produce from
fifteen to twenty distict patterns that could be combined in a number of
different ways.
|
1
|
What best distinguished Pomo baskets from baskets of other groups?
(A) The range of sizes, shapes, and designs
(B) The unusual geometric
(C) The absence of decoration
(D) The rare materials used
|
2
|
The word "fashion"
in line 2 is closest in meaning to
(A) maintain
(B) organize
(C) trade
(D) create
|
3
|
The Pomo people used each of the following
materials to decorate baskets EXCEPT
(A) shells
(B) feathers
(C) leaves
(D) bark
|
4
|
What is the author's
main point in the second paragraph?
(A) The neighbors of
the Pomo people tried to improve on the Pomo basket weaving techniques.
(B) The Pomo people
were the most skilled basket weavers in their region.
(C) The Pomo people
learned their basket weaving techniques from other Native Americans.
(D) The Pomo baskets
have been handed down for generations.
|
5
|
The word "others " in line 9
refers to
(A) masters
(B) baskets
(C) pendants
(D) surfaces
|
6
|
According to the
passage is a
(A) tool for separating
sedge root
(B) process used for
coloring baskets
(C) pliable maternal
woven around the warp
(D) pattern used to
decorate baskets
|
7
|
According to the passage, what did the Pomo
people use as the warp in their baskets?
(A) Bullrush
(B) willow
(C) Sedge
(D) Redbud
|
8
|
The word
"article" in line 17 is close in meaning to
(A) decoration
(B) shape
(C) design
(D) object
|
9
|
According
to the passage. The relationship between redbud and twining is most similar
to the relationship between
(A)
bullrush and coiling
(B)
weft and warp
(C)
willow and feathers
(D)
sedge and weaving
|
10
|
The word "staples" in line 23
is closest in meaning to
(A) combinations
(B) limitations
(C) accessories
(D) basic elements
|
11
|
The
word "distinct" in lime 26 is closest in meaning to
(A)
systematic
(B)
beautiful
(C)
different
(D)
compatible
|
12
|
Which of the following statements about Pomo
baskets can be best inferred from the passage?
(A) Baskets produced by other Native Americans
were less varied in design than those of the Pomo people.
(B) Baskets produced by Pomo weavers were
primarily for ceremonial purposes.
(C) There was a very limited number of basketmaking
materials available to the Pomo people.
(D) The basketmaking production of the Pomo
people has increased over the years.
|
|
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS EXERCISES
ANSWER KEY
1.
A
2.
D
3.
C
4.
B
5.
B
6.
C
7.
B
8.
D
9.
A
10. D
11. C
12. A
|
No comments:
Post a Comment
thank you for visiting my blog and for your nice comments