SAT语法练习题(四)含答案及解析

2024-04-27

来源: 易伯华教育

SAT语法练习题(四)含答案及解析

北京sat培训,sat备考资料,sat网课,sat培训机构,sat保分班,sat真题

本文易伯华SAT频道为大家整理了SAT语法练习题(四)含答案及解析,供考生们参考,以下是详细内容。

16. Unlike a typical automobile loan, which requires a fifteen- to

twenty-percent down payment, the lease-loan

buyer is not required to make an initial deposit on the new vehicle.

(A) the lease-loan buyer is not required to make

(B) with lease-loan buying there is no requirement of

(C) lease-loan buyers are not required to make

(D) for the lease-loan buyer there is no requirement of

(E) a lease-loan does not require the buyer to make

17. Native American burial sites dating back 5,000 years indicate that the

residents of Maine at that time were

part of a widespread culture of Algonquian-speaking people.

(A) were part of a widespread culture of Algonquian-speaking people

(B) had been part of a widespread culture of people who were

Algonquian-speaking

(C) were people who were part of a widespread culture that was

Algonquian-speaking

(D) had been people who were part of a widespread culture that was

Algonquian-speaking

(E) were a people which had been part of a widespread, Algonquian-speaking

culture

18. Each of Hemingway's wives--Hadley Richardson. Pauline Pfeiffer. Martha

Gelhom. and Mary Welsh --were

strong and interesting women, very different from the often pallid women who

populate his novels.

(A) Each of Hemingway's wives--Hadley Richardson, Pauline Pfeiffer, Martha

Gelhom, and Mary

Welsh--were strong and interesting women,

(B) Hadley Richardson, Pauline Pfeiffer, Martha Gelhorn, and Mary Welsh--each

of them Hemingway's

wives--were strong and, interesting women,

(C) Hemingway's wives--Hadley Richardson, Pauline Pfeiffer, Martha Gelhom,

and Mary Welsh--were all

strong and interesting women,

(D) Strong and interesting women—Hadley Richardson, Pauline Pfeiffer, Martha

Gelhom, and Mary

Welsh--each a wife of Hemingway, was

(E) Strong and interesting women—Hadley Richardson, Pauline Pfeiffer, Martha

Gelhom, and Mary

Welsh--every one of Hemingway's wives were

19. In addition to having more protein -than wheat does, the protein in rice

is higher quality than that in wheat,

with more of the amino acids essential to the human diet.

(A) the protein in rice is higher quality than that in

(B) rice has protein of higher quality than that in

(C) the protein in rice is higher in quality than it is in

SAT语法练习题(四)含答案及解析

(D) rice protein is higher in quality than it is in

(E) rice has a protein higher in quality than

20. An array of tax incentives has led to a boom in the construction of new

office buildings; so abundant has

capital been for commercial real estate that investors regularly scour the

country for areas in which to build.

(A) so abundant has capital been for commercial real estate that

(B) capital has been so abundant for commercial real estate, so that

(C) the abundance of capital for commercial real estate has been such,

(D) such has the abundance of capital been for commercial real estate

that

(E) such has been an abundance of capital for commercial real estate,

Answer to Question 16

Choice E, the best answer, correctly uses a parallel construction to draw a

logical comparison: Unlike a typical

automobile loan,... a lease-loan.... Choice A illogically compares an

automobile loan, an inanimate thing, with

a lease-loan buyer, a person. In choice C, buyers makes the comparison

inconsistent in number as well as

illogical. Choices B and D are syntactically and logically flawed because

each attempts to compare the noun

loan and a prepositional phrase: with lease-loan buying in B and/or the

lease-loan buyer in D. Choices B and

D are also imprecise and awkward. Finally, choice E is the only option that

supplies an active verb form, does

not require, to parallel requires.

Answer to Question 17

Choice A is best because it correctly uses the simple past tense, the

residents... at that time were, and

because it is the most concise. In B and D, the replacement of were with the

past perfect had been needlessly

changes the original meaning by suggesting that the Native Americans had

previously ceased to be part of the

widespread culture. All of the choices but A are wordy, and in C, D, and E

the word people redundantly

describes the residents rather than the larger group to which the residents

belonged. These choices are also

imprecise because they state that the culture, rather than people, spoke the

Algonquian language. Choice E

displays inconsistent tenses and an error of pronoun reference, people

which.

159

Answer to Question 18

Each choice but C contains errors of agreement. In both A and E, the singular

subject (each in A, every one in E)

does not agree with the plural verb were, while in D, the plural subject

women is mismatched with the singular

verb was. In B, the subject and verb agree, but the descriptive phrase placed

between them creates an illogical

statement because each cannot be wives; each can be one of the wives, or a

wife. The pronoun constructions

in A, B, D, and E are wordy; also, B, D, and E are very awkwardly structured

and do not convey the point about

Hemingway's wives clearly. Choice C correctly links wives with were,

eliminates the unnecessary pronouns,

and provides a clearer structure.

Answer to Question 19

In this sentence, the initial clause modifies the nearest noun, identifying

it as the thing being compared with

wheat. By making protein the noun modified, choices A, C, and D illogically

compare wheat with protein and

claim that the protein in rice has more protein than wheat does. In C and D,

the comparative structure higher in

quality than it is in wheat absurdly suggests that rice protein contains

wheat. B, the best choice, logically

compares wheat to rice by placing the noun rice immediately after the initial

clause. B also uses that to refer to

protein in making the comparison between the proteins of rice and wheat.

Choice E needs either that in or

does after wheat to make a complete and logical comparison.

Answer to Question 20

Choice A is best. The construction so abundant has capital been... that

correctly and clearly expresses the

relationship between the abundance and the investors' response. In choice B,

the repetition of so is illogical and

unidiomatic. Choices C, D, and E alter somewhat the intended meaning of the

sentence; because of its position

in these statements, such functions to mean "of a kind" rather than to

intensify abundant. Choice D awkwardly

separates has and been, and the omission of that from C and E makes those

choices ungrammatical.

快速备考SAT知识点

免费1对1规划学习方法

易伯华 SAT知识点免费体验课
18小时免费体验课程
【18小时免费体验课程】

免费语言规划,留学规划

点击试听
  • 账号登录
社交账号登录