Test Prep Section One : Verbal Reasoning MCAT Section 1: Verbal Reasoning Exam Questions in PDF

Free Test Prep MCAT Section 1: Verbal Reasoning Dumps Questions (page: 27)

Today's new urban Asia is just as sophisticated and in many ways more exciting than Western cities. Urban Asian consumers are knowledgeable, modern, and keen to embrace the global lifestyle. Young, urban Asians have grown up accustomed to many things that originated in the West. They have, for example, completely embraced pizza, some even claiming that it is a part of their heritage. The story is told about a young Singaporean boy who was taken by his father to Rome. "Hey, look, Dad," the little boy exclaimed, "they have pizza here too!" On sampling the product, the boy decided that it was not as good as the original back home.
Nury Vitachi, who writes for the South China Post and the Far Eastern Economic Review, describes the Asian middle-class phenomenon: "Executives in Asia have become rich at warp speed by taking full control of their own lives. They invest a great deal of time in their work, they use strategy to scramble up the corporate ladder, and they demand payment in cash ­ so they can make their money work as hard as they do."
Signs of affluence are everywhere, but don't get carried away. Traveling around Asia, no matter how rich the Asians become, signs of their frugal nature are still apparent. And they are very cost-conscious. Shopkeepers in many Asian cities, most notably in Hong Kong, demand payments for discounted merchandise in cash instead of plastic, and many Asians are accustomed to that. Most people save the increases in their income, and many prefer to put it into fixed or other income-generating assets. Stock, land, and property are their favorites.
Many affluent Asians still regard financial security as the most important form of security, and they are confident that Asia is the place to be to achieve that. While many have begun to savor the good life, they are not letting go of their top priority of education for their children. Education is looked upon as the most important contributing factor to success in life. And in many of Asia's competitive urban centers, there is a rush to acquire a second degree and other forms of professional qualification to ensure personal competitiveness in the workplace. There are extraordinary opportunities in Asia for education and training programs from language to software programming.
Despite the rise in their assertiveness, Asians still look to the United States and not so much to Europe for ideas and trends. In general, except for those in Hong Kong and Japan, they are not particularly concerned with being fashionable. For today's Asia, Japan and Hong Kong are the sources of Asian fashion ideas, but as Asia becomes more affluent, there is a great opportunity to develop an indigenous fashion industry. For example, a huge market potential exists in introducing new materials and simplified but fashionable designs for countries in tropical Asia with a hot humid climate throughout the year.
The population density and lack of space in urban areas has prohibited Asians from exercising frequently and few indulge in outdoor activities. This is changing. Most Asians consider themselves in good health. Compared with Americans, few are overweight ­ largely as a result of their Asian diet. But now health clubs are becoming popular among younger Asians. Potential for indoor exercise equipment holds great promise. It is also important to dress for the gym, and younger Asians are serious about looking good, complete with makeup, sunglasses, designer exercise shoes and outfits, and a gym bag.
In trying to hit Asia's moving targets, regardless of what you are selling, it is a good idea to stick with market density ­ not country by country, but, mostly, city by city. Asian markets can be a marketer's dream in that their densities are among the highest in the world. Java, Indonesia's main island, has 115 million people. On Nanjing Road, Shanghai's busiest street, businesses are open twelve hours a day almost every day of the year. More than 1.5 million people visit the shops there and spend more than $50 million every day.
Someone said that you can only become rich if you sell to the rich. I would add that you can become rich faster if you sell to the new rich. For investors in the West, watch for Western companies that are preparing a big push in Asia. The world has not yet seen anything like it before, and you can reap handsome dividends if you back those stocks that are going eastward.
Based on the information presented in the passage, with which of the following statements would the author most likely agree?

  1. Every Asian nation shows some evidence of wealth.
  2. Routine exercise keeps many Asians in prime physical condition.
  3. Many Asian cities are large enough to be considered independent markets.
  4. Asia's markets have recently been flooded with American goods.

Answer(s): C

Explanation:

Choice C is the correct response by arguments found in paragraph seven.
Choice A is an oversimplification of the information given in the passage, which discusses the prosperity of certain regions in Asia, but which by no means imply that every nation in the continent can be regarded as wealthy.
Choice B is incorrect because the author attributes the health of Asians to their diet.
Choice D is incorrect: even though the author contends that trends and ideas are fostered by American goods, there is no discussion about their volume or market share.



Today's new urban Asia is just as sophisticated and in many ways more exciting than Western cities. Urban Asian consumers are knowledgeable, modern, and keen to embrace the global lifestyle. Young, urban Asians have grown up accustomed to many things that originated in the West. They have, for example, completely embraced pizza, some even claiming that it is a part of their heritage. The story is told about a young Singaporean boy who was taken by his father to Rome. "Hey, look, Dad," the little boy exclaimed, "they have pizza here too!" On sampling the product, the boy decided that it was not as good as the original back home.
Nury Vitachi, who writes for the South China Post and the Far Eastern Economic Review, describes the Asian middle-class phenomenon: "Executives in Asia have become rich at warp speed by taking full control of their own lives. They invest a great deal of time in their work, they use strategy to scramble up the corporate ladder, and they demand payment in cash ­ so they can make their money work as hard as they do."
Signs of affluence are everywhere, but don't get carried away. Traveling around Asia, no matter how rich the Asians become, signs of their frugal nature are still apparent. And they are very cost-conscious. Shopkeepers in many Asian cities, most notably in Hong Kong, demand payments for discounted merchandise in cash instead of plastic, and many Asians are accustomed to that. Most people save the increases in their income, and many prefer to put it into fixed or other income-generating assets. Stock, land, and property are their favorites.
Many affluent Asians still regard financial security as the most important form of security, and they are confident that Asia is the place to be to achieve that. While many have begun to savor the good life, they are not letting go of their top priority of education for their children. Education is looked upon as the most important contributing factor to success in life. And in many of Asia's competitive urban centers, there is a rush to acquire a second degree and other forms of professional qualification to ensure personal competitiveness in the workplace. There are extraordinary opportunities in Asia for education and training programs from language to software programming.
Despite the rise in their assertiveness, Asians still look to the United States and not so much to Europe for ideas and trends. In general, except for those in Hong Kong and Japan, they are not particularly concerned with being fashionable. For today's Asia, Japan and Hong Kong are the sources of Asian fashion ideas, but as Asia becomes more affluent, there is a great opportunity to develop an indigenous fashion industry. For example, a huge market potential exists in introducing new materials and simplified but fashionable designs for countries in tropical Asia with a hot humid climate throughout the year.
The population density and lack of space in urban areas has prohibited Asians from exercising frequently and few indulge in outdoor activities. This is changing. Most Asians consider themselves in good health. Compared with Americans, few are overweight ­ largely as a result of their Asian diet. But now health clubs are becoming popular among younger Asians. Potential for indoor exercise equipment holds great promise. It is also important to dress for the gym, and younger Asians are serious about looking good, complete with makeup, sunglasses, designer exercise shoes and outfits, and a gym bag.
In trying to hit Asia's moving targets, regardless of what you are selling, it is a good idea to stick with market density ­ not country by country, but, mostly, city by city. Asian markets can be a marketer's dream in that their densities are among the highest in the world. Java, Indonesia's main island, has 115 million people. On Nanjing Road, Shanghai's busiest street, businesses are open twelve hours a day almost every day of the year. More than 1.5 million people visit the shops there and spend more than $50 million every day.
Someone said that you can only become rich if you sell to the rich. I would add that you can become rich faster if you sell to the new rich. For investors in the West, watch for Western companies that are preparing a big push in Asia. The world has not yet seen anything like it before, and you can reap handsome dividends if you back those stocks that are going eastward.
The quote by Vitachi (lines 15-20) is used by the author to illustrate that:

  1. Asians have an economic environment much different than the rest of the global economy.
  2. Asian executives are becoming wealthy by adopting patterns similar to Western executives.
  3. Asia is developing a middle class that has characteristics similar to those of Westerners.
  4. Asian executives' efforts to become rich are proving fruitful.

Answer(s): D

Explanation:

Vitachi describes how executives in Asia have been able to attain financial prosperity. The statements in all the other choices may or may not be correct, but this is not the reason why the quote is cited.



Today's new urban Asia is just as sophisticated and in many ways more exciting than Western cities. Urban Asian consumers are knowledgeable, modern, and keen to embrace the global lifestyle. Young, urban Asians have grown up accustomed to many things that originated in the West. They have, for example, completely embraced pizza, some even claiming that it is a part of their heritage. The story is told about a young Singaporean boy who was taken by his father to Rome. "Hey, look, Dad," the little boy exclaimed, "they have pizza here too!" On sampling the product, the boy decided that it was not as good as the original back home.
Nury Vitachi, who writes for the South China Post and the Far Eastern Economic Review, describes the Asian middle-class phenomenon: "Executives in Asia have become rich at warp speed by taking full control of their own lives. They invest a great deal of time in their work, they use strategy to scramble up the corporate ladder, and they demand payment in cash ­ so they can make their money work as hard as they do."
Signs of affluence are everywhere, but don't get carried away. Traveling around Asia, no matter how rich the Asians become, signs of their frugal nature are still apparent. And they are very cost-conscious. Shopkeepers in many Asian cities, most notably in Hong Kong, demand payments for discounted merchandise in cash instead of plastic, and many Asians are accustomed to that. Most people save the increases in their income, and many prefer to put it into fixed or other income-generating assets. Stock, land, and property are their favorites.
Many affluent Asians still regard financial security as the most important form of security, and they are confident

that Asia is the place to be to achieve that. While many have begun to savor the good life, they are not letting go of their top priority of education for their children. Education is looked upon as the most important contributing factor to success in life. And in many of Asia's competitive urban centers, there is a rush to acquire a second degree and other forms of professional qualification to ensure personal competitiveness in the workplace. There are extraordinary opportunities in Asia for education and training programs from language to software programming.
Despite the rise in their assertiveness, Asians still look to the United States and not so much to Europe for ideas and trends. In general, except for those in Hong Kong and Japan, they are not particularly concerned with being fashionable. For today's Asia, Japan and Hong Kong are the sources of Asian fashion ideas, but as Asia becomes more affluent, there is a great opportunity to develop an indigenous fashion industry. For example, a huge market potential exists in introducing new materials and simplified but fashionable designs for countries in tropical Asia with a hot humid climate throughout the year.
The population density and lack of space in urban areas has prohibited Asians from exercising frequently and few indulge in outdoor activities. This is changing. Most Asians consider themselves in good health. Compared with Americans, few are overweight ­ largely as a result of their Asian diet. But now health clubs are becoming popular among younger Asians. Potential for indoor exercise equipment holds great promise. It is also important to dress for the gym, and younger Asians are serious about looking good, complete with makeup, sunglasses, designer exercise shoes and outfits, and a gym bag.
In trying to hit Asia's moving targets, regardless of what you are selling, it is a good idea to stick with market density ­ not country by country, but, mostly, city by city. Asian markets can be a marketer's dream in that their densities are among the highest in the world. Java, Indonesia's main island, has 115 million people. On Nanjing Road, Shanghai's busiest street, businesses are open twelve hours a day almost every day of the year. More than 1.5 million people visit the shops there and spend more than $50 million every day.
Someone said that you can only become rich if you sell to the rich. I would add that you can become rich faster if you sell to the new rich. For investors in the West, watch for Western companies that are preparing a big push in Asia. The world has not yet seen anything like it before, and you can reap handsome dividends if you back those stocks that are going eastward.
Which of the following is NOT directly supported by the passage?

  1. Asians have already assimilated many Western customs and fashions.
  2. Future investment in Asian markets will be the most lucrative action for Western manufacturers.
  3. Urban professionals in Asia consider education as beneficial to their careers.
  4. The affluence of many Asians is not always evident in their spending patterns.

Answer(s): B

Explanation:

The author certainly believes that the Asian markets hold tremendous potential for investment. However, nowhere is it stated that such a course of action is necessarily the most lucrative among all possible courses.
The statement in choice A is supported by information contained in the first paragraph.
Choice C is directly stated in the fourth paragraph.
Choice D is also supported by the passage which states in paragraph three that despite their newfound wealth, Asians still tend to be frugal and cost-conscious.



Today's new urban Asia is just as sophisticated and in many ways more exciting than Western cities. Urban Asian consumers are knowledgeable, modern, and keen to embrace the global lifestyle. Young, urban Asians have grown up accustomed to many things that originated in the West. They have, for example, completely embraced pizza, some even claiming that it is a part of their heritage. The story is told about a young Singaporean boy who was taken by his father to Rome. "Hey, look, Dad," the little boy exclaimed, "they have pizza here too!" On sampling the product, the boy decided that it was not as good as the original back home.
Nury Vitachi, who writes for the South China Post and the Far Eastern Economic Review, describes the Asian middle-class phenomenon: "Executives in Asia have become rich at warp speed by taking full control of their own lives. They invest a great deal of time in their work, they use strategy to scramble up the corporate ladder, and they demand payment in cash ­ so they can make their money work as hard as they do."
Signs of affluence are everywhere, but don't get carried away. Traveling around Asia, no matter how rich the Asians become, signs of their frugal nature are still apparent. And they are very cost-conscious. Shopkeepers in many Asian cities, most notably in Hong Kong, demand payments for discounted merchandise in cash instead of plastic, and many Asians are accustomed to that. Most people save the increases in their income, and many prefer to put it into fixed or other income-generating assets. Stock, land, and property are their favorites.
Many affluent Asians still regard financial security as the most important form of security, and they are confident that Asia is the place to be to achieve that. While many have begun to savor the good life, they are not letting go of their top priority of education for their children. Education is looked upon as the most important contributing factor to success in life. And in many of Asia's competitive urban centers, there is a rush to acquire a second degree and other forms of professional qualification to ensure personal competitiveness in the workplace. There are extraordinary opportunities in Asia for education and training programs from language to software programming.
Despite the rise in their assertiveness, Asians still look to the United States and not so much to Europe for ideas and trends. In general, except for those in Hong Kong and Japan, they are not particularly concerned with being fashionable. For today's Asia, Japan and Hong Kong are the sources of Asian fashion ideas, but as Asia becomes more affluent, there is a great opportunity to develop an indigenous fashion industry. For example, a huge market potential exists in introducing new materials and simplified but fashionable designs for countries in tropical Asia with a hot humid climate throughout the year.
The population density and lack of space in urban areas has prohibited Asians from exercising frequently and few indulge in outdoor activities. This is changing. Most Asians consider themselves in good health. Compared with Americans, few are overweight ­ largely as a result of their Asian diet. But now health clubs are becoming popular among younger Asians. Potential for indoor exercise equipment holds great promise. It is also important to dress for the gym, and younger Asians are serious about looking good, complete with makeup, sunglasses, designer exercise shoes and outfits, and a gym bag.
In trying to hit Asia's moving targets, regardless of what you are selling, it is a good idea to stick with market density ­ not country by country, but, mostly, city by city. Asian markets can be a marketer's dream in that their densities are among the highest in the world. Java, Indonesia's main island, has 115 million people. On Nanjing Road, Shanghai's busiest street, businesses are open twelve hours a day almost every day of the year. More than 1.5 million people visit the shops there and spend more than $50 million every day.
Someone said that you can only become rich if you sell to the rich. I would add that you can become rich faster if you sell to the new rich. For investors in the West, watch for Western companies that are preparing a big push in Asia. The world has not yet seen anything like it before, and you can reap handsome dividends if you back those stocks that are going eastward.
In the passage, the author does all of the following EXCEPT:

  1. resolve a seeming economic paradox.
  2. offer an interpretation of an observed trend.
  3. project consequences of current developments.
  4. make the information presented relevant to the reader.

Answer(s): A

Explanation:

The author does not resolve, or attempt to resolve, any economic paradox: for example, he does not try to present Asia's prosperity as an anomaly and explain this "Asia phenomenon." He does, however, interpret observed trends based on characteristics he attributes to Asians: cost consciousness, low level of preoccupation with health, etc. Choice B is therefore incorrect. He describes business opportunities based on projection on current observations: popularity of further education, fashion trends, etc. In the last paragraph, he offers quite specific advice to his readers about investing in companies that are making a push in Asia. Choices C and D are hence also incorrect.



...[TV Guide's] immediate concern was the television quiz show scandal, which had reached its climax two weeks earlier when Charles Van Doren, the appealing young man who'd taught viewers the value of learning while winning big on MCA's Twenty-one, stood before a House committee and admitted he was a fraud. But the issue went well beyond rigged quiz shows. The charge was that through their stranglehold on talent, MCA and William Morris monopolized the medium to the detriment of their clients, the industry, and the public at large. This was why the Justice Department had launched a secret investigation of both agencies more than two years before.
The Morris Agency had started the quiz show vogue in 1955, when it packaged The $64,000 Question for Revlon and sold it to CBS. While the show won praise for its "educational" nature, the real source of its appeal was in its crapshoot format ­ the idea that once contestants' winnings hit the $32,000 mark, they had to decide whether to go double or nothing on the final, $64,000 question, or play it safe and go home. The response was tremendous. Within weeks, the show knocked I Love Lucy out of the number-one slot in the ratings. Casinos in Vegas emptied out when it went on the air. Bookies took odds on whether the first contestant to go for the big one ­ a marine captain whose specialty was cooking ­ would get the answer right. (He did.) Revlon sold so much Living Lipstick that its factory was unable to meet the demand.
The $64,000 Question quickly inspired imitators, among them an MCA package called Twenty-one. Based on the card game, more or less, Twenty-one was a dismal failure at first. "Do whatever you have to do," the sponsor ordered angrily, so the producers put the fix in. In December 1956, when Charles Van Doren, a boyishly attractive English instructor at Columbia University, beat Herb Stempel, a short, squat, nerdy grad at City College, Van Doren became the first intellectual hero of the television age. Honors and acclaim poured in ­ the covers of Time, letters by the hundreds, offers of movie roles and tenured professorships and a regular guest spot on The Today Show. But Herb Stempel didn't like being told to lose, especially to some Ivy League snot. He went to the press. The DA's office started to investigate. The walls began to close in.
Meanwhile, the show's producers agreed to sell the rights to NBC for $2 million. One of them started to feel queasy about selling the show without letting the network know the score, so he went to Sonny Werblin, MCA's top man in New York, and asked his advice. Werblin, the man behind such hits as The Ed Sullivan Show and The Jackie Gleason Show, ran the television department as if it were a football team coached by Attila the Hun. "Dan," he asked the producer, "have I ever asked you whether the show was rigged?" No, he hadn't. "And has NBC ever asked you whether the show is rigged?" No, they hadn't either. "Well," Werblin concluded, "the reason that none of us has asked is because we don't want to know."
And with good reason. Not only was Twenty-one an MCA package and Van Doren himself an MCA client; Werblin had a special relationship with NBC's president, Robert Kintner. Kintner had been president of ABC until...ABC's chairman forced him out in his determination to move the network out of third place. MCA used its influence to place him at NBC, where he proved an extremely pliant customer. In the spring of 1957, when the networks were putting together their schedules for the next season, Werblin went to a meeting of NBC programming executives led by Kintner and his boss, RCA chairman Robert Sarnoff. "Sonny, look at the schedule for next season," Kintner said when he walked in, "here are the empty slots, you fill them."
Suppose that the contestants on the television game shows mentioned in the passage had not been supplied with answers. Which of the following conclusions would most likely be correct?

  1. The Justice Department would have ended its investigation into the television production industry.
  2. Herb Stempel would have continued as champion on Twenty-one.
  3. The ABC chairman would not have removed Robert Kintner from the presidency.
  4. Herb Stempel would not have gone to the press shortly after December 1956.

Answer(s): D

Explanation:

It was stated in the passage that the reason why Stempel went to the press was because he did not like being the "predetermined loser." If the contestants had been competing fairly, therefore, he would not have gone to the press.
Choice A is incorrect because even though the rigging of game shows was what precipitated intense investigation, it is stated in paragraph 1 that a secret investigation had been launched more than two years before because of suspected monopolizing activity within the industry.
Choice B is not the correct choice because Stempel may have lost fairly as well. Nothing in the passage indicates that his continued winning is necessarily a likely outcome.
Choice C is incorrect because there is no indication at all that the firing of Kintner is related to the quiz show scandal.



Share your comments for Test Prep MCAT Section 1: Verbal Reasoning exam with other users:

E
EDITH NCUBE
7/25/2023 7:28:00 AM

answers are correct

R
Raja
6/20/2023 4:38:00 AM

good explanation

B
BigMouthDog
1/22/2022 8:17:00 PM

hi team just want to know if there is any update version of the exam 350-401

F
francesco
10/30/2023 11:08:00 AM

helpful on 2017 scrum guide

A
Amitabha Roy
10/5/2023 3:16:00 AM

planning to attempt for the exam.

P
Prem Yadav
7/29/2023 6:20:00 AM

pleaseee upload

A
Ahmed Hashi
7/6/2023 5:40:00 PM

thanks ly so i have information cia

M
mansi
5/31/2023 7:58:00 AM

hello team, i need sap qm dumps for practice

J
Jamil aljamil
12/4/2023 4:47:00 AM

it’s good but not senatios based

C
Cath
10/10/2023 10:19:00 AM

q.119 - the correct answer is b - they are not captured in an update set as theyre data.

P
P
1/6/2024 11:22:00 AM

good matter

S
surya
7/30/2023 2:02:00 PM

please upload c_sacp_2308

S
Sasuke
7/11/2023 10:30:00 PM

please upload the dump. thanks very much !!

V
V
7/4/2023 8:57:00 AM

good questions

T
TTB
8/22/2023 5:30:00 AM

hi, could you please update the latest dump version

T
T
7/28/2023 9:06:00 PM

this question is keep repeat : you are developing a sales application that will contain several azure cloud services and handle different components of a transaction. different cloud services will process customer orders, billing, payment, inventory, and shipping. you need to recommend a solution to enable the cloud services to asynchronously communicate transaction information by using xml messages. what should you include in the recommendation?

G
Gurgaon
9/28/2023 4:35:00 AM

great questions

W
wasif
10/11/2023 2:22:00 AM

its realy good

S
Shubhra Rathi
8/26/2023 1:12:00 PM

oracle 1z0-1059-22 dumps

L
Leo
7/29/2023 8:48:00 AM

please share me the pdf..

A
AbedRabbou Alaqabna
12/18/2023 3:10:00 AM

q50: which two functions can be used by an end user when pivoting an interactive report? the correct answer is a, c because we do not have rank in the function pivoting you can check in the apex app

R
Rohan Limaye
12/30/2023 8:52:00 AM

best to practice

A
Aparajeeta
10/13/2023 2:42:00 PM

so far it is good

V
Vgf
7/20/2023 3:59:00 PM

please provide me the dump

D
Deno
10/25/2023 1:14:00 AM

i failed the cisa exam today. but i have found all the questions that were on the exam to be on this site.

C
CiscoStudent
11/15/2023 5:29:00 AM

in question 272 the right answer states that an autonomous acces point is "configured and managed by the wlc" but this is not what i have learned in my ccna course. is this a mistake? i understand that lightweight aps are managed by wlc while autonomous work as standalones on the wlan.

P
pankaj
9/28/2023 4:36:00 AM

it was helpful

U
User123
10/8/2023 9:59:00 AM

good question

V
vinay
9/4/2023 10:23:00 AM

really nice

U
Usman
8/28/2023 10:07:00 AM

please i need dumps for isc2 cybersecuity

Q
Q44
7/30/2023 11:50:00 AM

ans is coldline i think

A
Anuj
12/21/2023 1:30:00 PM

very helpful

G
Giri
9/13/2023 10:31:00 PM

can you please provide dumps so that it helps me more

A
Aaron
2/8/2023 12:10:00 AM

thank you for providing me with the updated question and answers. this version has all the questions from the exam. i just saw them in my exam this morning. i passed my exam today.

AI Tutor 👋 I’m here to help!