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PSAT PSAT Certification PSAT-Reading

PSAT-Reading

시험 번호/코드: PSAT-Reading

시험 이름: Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test - Reading

업데이트: 2026-07-12

Q & A: 258문항

PSAT-Reading 덤프무료샘플다운로드하기

PDF Version Demo Testing Engine Online Test Engine

PDF Version 가격: $138.00  $59.98


Pass4Test PSAT-Reading 시험덤프개요

최근들어 PSAT PSAT-Reading시험이 큰 인기몰이를 하고 있는 가장 핫한 IT인증시험입니다. PSAT PSAT-Reading인증시험을 패스하여 자격증을 취득하면 보다 쉽고 빠르게 승진할수 있고 연봉상승에도 많은 도움을 얻을수 있습니다.

그럼 어떻게 하면 가장 편하고 수월하게 PSAT PSAT-Reading시험을 패스할수 있을가요? 그 답은 바로 Pass4Test에서 찾아볼수 있습니다. Pass4Test는 당신을 위해 IT인증시험이라는 높은 벽을 순식간에 무너뜨립니다.

Pass4Test의 PSAT Certification 덤프를 공부하면 100%시험패스보장!

Pass4Test 의 IT전문가들이 자신만의 경험과 끊임없는 노력으로 최고의 PSAT-Reading학습자료를 작성해 여러분들이 시험에서 패스하도록 최선을 다하고 있습니다. PSAT-Reading시험을 보기로 결심한 분은 가장 안전하고 가장 최신인 적중율 100%에 달하는 시험대비덤프를 Pass4Test에서 받을 수 있습니다.

저희 사이트에서 제공해드리는 PSAT PSAT-Reading덤프는 실러버스의 갱신에 따라 업데이트되기에 고객님께서 구매한 PSAT PSAT-Reading덤프가 시중에서 가장 최신버전임을 장담해드립니다.덤프의 문제와 답을 모두 기억하시면 시험에서 한방에 패스할수 있습니다.

1. 100%합격가능한 PSAT-Reading덤프는 기출문제와 예상문제로 되어있는 퍼펙트한 모음문제집입니다.
2. PSAT-Reading덤프의 소프트웨어버전은 실제 시험환경을 체험해보실수 있습니다.
3. PSAT-Reading덤프는 주기적으로 업데이트되어 최신 기출문제도 포함될수 있게 최선을 다하고 있습니다.
4. 엄청난 학원수강료 필요없이 20~30시간의 독학만으로도 시험패스가 충분합니다.
5. PSAT-Reading시험의 모든 유형, 예를 들어 Exhibits、Drag & Drop、Simulation 등 문제가 모두 포함되어 있습니다.
6. PSAT-Reading덤프를 구입하시면 1년무료 업데이트서비스를 받을수 있습니다.
7. Pass4Test 에서는 한국어로 온라인서비스와 메일서비스를 제공해드립니다.

1년무료 업데이트 서비스란?

1년무료 업데이트 서비스란 Pass4Test에서 PSAT PSAT-Reading덤프를 구매한 분은 구매일부터 추후 일년간 PSAT-Reading덤프가 업데이트될때마다 업데이트된 가장 최신버전을 무료로 제공받는 서비스를 가리킵니다. 1년무료 업데이트 서비스는 덤프비용을 환불받을시 종료됩니다.

덤프의 무료샘플을 원하신다면 우의 PDF Version Demo 버튼을 클릭하고 메일주소를 입력하시면 바로 다운받아 PSAT-Reading덤프의 일부분 문제를 체험해 보실수 있습니다.

Pass4Test는 응시자에게 있어서 시간이 정말 소중하다는 것을 잘 알고 있으므로 PSAT-Reading덤프를 자주 업데이트 하고, 오래 되고 더 이상 사용 하지 않는 문제들은 바로 삭제해버리며 새로운 최신 문제들을 추가 합니다. 이는 응시자가 확실하고도 빠르게 덤프를 마스터하고 시험을 패스할수 있도록 하는 또 하나의 보장입니다.

Pass4Test는 고객님께서 PSAT-Reading첫번째 시험에서 패스할수 있도록 최선을 다하고 있습니다. 만일 어떤 이유로 인해 고객님이 PSAT-Reading시험에서 실패를 한다면 Pass4Test는 PSAT-Reading덤프비용 전액을 환불 해드립니다.

Pass4Test는 고객님께서 PSAT-Reading첫번째 시험에서 패스할수 있도록 최선을 다하고 있습니다. 덤프 구매후 시험보셔서 불합격 받으시면 덤프구매일로부터 60일내에 환불신청하시면 덤프비용전액을 환불해드립니다. 60일이 지나면 환불서비스는 자동으로 종료됩니다.

최신 PSAT Certification PSAT-Reading 무료샘플문제:

1. Had Einstein not been such a ______ mathematician, many of our engineering Accomplishments may
have taken many years before even reaching the drawing board.

A) prophetic
B) qualified
C) superb
D) prosaic
E) prodigious


2. This passage discusses the work of Abe Kobo, a Japanese novelist of the twentieth century.
Abe Kobo is one of the great writers of postwar Japan. His literature is richer, less predictable, and
wider-ranging than that of his famed contemporaries, Mishima Yukio and Nobel laureate Oe Kenzaburo. It
is infused with the passion and strangeness of his experiences in Manchuria, which was a Japanese
colony on mainland China before World War II.
Abe spent his childhood and much of his youth in Manchuria, and, as a result, the orbit of his work would
be far less controlled by the oppressive gravitational pull of the themes of furusato (hometown) and the
emperor than his contemporaries'.
Abe, like most of the sons of Japanese families living in Manchuria, did return to Japan for schooling. He
entered medical school in Tokyo in 1944--just in time to forge himself a medical certificate claiming ill
health; this allowed him to avoid fighting in the war that Japan was already losing and return to Manchuria.
When Japan lost the war, however, it also lost its Manchurian colony. The Japanese living there were
attacked by the Soviet Army and various guerrilla bands. They suddenly found themselves refugees,
desperate for food. Many unfit men were abandoned in the Manchurian desert. At this apocalyptic time,
Abe lost his father to cholera.
He returned to mainland Japan once more, where the young were turning to Marxism as a rejection of the
militarism of the war. After a brief, unsuccessful stint at medical school, he became part of a Marxist group
of avant-garde artists. His work at this time was passionate and outspoken on political matters, adopting
black humor as its mode of critique. During this time, Abe worked in the genres of theater, music, and
photography. Eventually, he mimeographed fifty copies of his first "published" literary work, entitled
Anonymous Poems, in 1947. It was a politically charged set of poems dedicated to the memory of his
father and friends who had died in Manchuria. Shortly thereafter, he published his first novel, For a
Signpost at the End of a Road, which imagined another life for his best friend who had died in the
Manchurian desert. Abe was also active in the Communist Party, organizing literary groups for
workingmen.
Unfortunately, most of this radical early work is unknown outside Japan and underappreciated even in
Japan. In early 1962, Abe was dismissed from the Japanese Liberalist Party. Four months later, he
published the work that would blind us to his earlier oeuvre, Woman in the Dunes. It was director
Teshigahara Hiroshi's film adaptation of Woman in the Dunes that brought Abe's work to the international
stage. The movie's fame has wrongly led readers to view the novel as Abe's masterpiece. It would be
more accurate to say that the novel simply marked a turning point in his career, when Abe turned away
from the experimental and heavily political work of his earlier career. Fortunately, he did not then turn to
furusato and the emperor after all, but rather began a somewhat more realistic exploration of his
continuing obsession with homelessness and alienation. Not completely a stranger to his earlier
commitment to Marxism, Abe turned his attention, beginning in the sixties, to the effects on the individual
of Japan's rapidly urbanizing, growthdriven, increasingly corporate society.
The author's main purpose in the passage is to

A) explain the differences between Abe's earlier and later works.
B) demonstrate that Abe's work became less interesting after he left Manchuria.
C) argue that Abe is an even greater writer and artist than generally perceived.
D) advocate for Abe's work over that of his contemporaries.
E) defend Abe's later works against the prevalent criticism of it.


3. Oliver Goldsmith (17301774) wrote criticism, plays, novels, biographies, travelogues, and nearly every
other conceivable kind of composition. This good-humored essay is from a series published in the Public
Ledger and then in book form as The Citizen of the World (1762).
Were we to estimate the learning of the English by the number of books that are every day published
among them, perhaps no country, not even China itself, could equal them in this particular. I have
reckoned not less than twenty-three new books published in one day, which, upon computation, makes
eight thousand three hundred and ninety-five in one year. Most of these are not confined to one single
science, but embrace the whole circle. History, politics, poetry, mathematics, metaphysics, and the
philosophy of nature, are all comprised in a manual no larger than that in which our children are taught the
letters. If then, we suppose the learned of England to read but an eighth part of the works which daily
come from the press and surely non can pretend to learning upon less easy terms), at this rate every
scholar will read a thousand books in one year. From such a calculation, you may conjecture what an
amazing fund of literature a man must be possessed of, who thus reads three new books every day, not
one of which but contains all the good things that ever were said or written.
And yet I know not how it happens, but the English are not, in reality so learned as would seem from this
calculation. We meet but few who know all arts and sciences to perfection; whether it is that the generality
are incapable of such extensive knowledge, or that the authors of those books are not adequate
instructors. In China, the Emperor himself takes cognizance of all the doctors in the kingdom who profess
authorship. In England, every man may be an author, that can write; for they have by law a liberty, not
only of saying what they please, but of being also as dull as they please.
Yesterday, as I testified to my surprise, to the man in black, where writers could be found in sufficient
number to throw off the books I saw daily crowding from the press. I at first imagined that their learned
seminaries might take this method of instructing the world. But, to obviate this objection, my companion
assured me that the doctors of colleges never wrote, and that some of them had actually forgot their
reading. "But if you desire," continued he, "to see a collection of authors, I fancy I can introduce you to a
club, which assembles every Saturday at seven . . . ." I accepted his invitation; we walked together, and
entered the house some time before the usual hour for the company assembling. My friend took this
opportunity of letting me into the characters of the principal members of the club . . .
"The first person," said he, "of our society is Doctor Nonentity, a metaphysician. Most people think him a
profound scholar, but, as he seldom speaks, I cannot be positive in that particular; he generally spreads
himself before the fire, sucks his pipe, talks little, drinks much, and is reckoned very good company. I'm
told he writes indexes to perfection: he makes essays on the origin of evil, philosophical inquiries upon
any subject, and draws up an answer to any book upon 24 hours' warning . . . ."
Goldsmith first assumes that English writers come from

A) China
B) seminaries
C) the press
D) foreign lands
E) clubs


4. He was born a slave, but T. Thomas Fortune (18561928) went on to become a journalist, editor, and civil
rights activist, founding several early black newspapers and a civil rights organization that predated W. E.
B. DuBois' Niagara Movement (later the NAACP). Like many black leaders of his time, Fortune was torn
between the radical leanings of DuBois and the more conservative ideology of Booker T. Washington.
This 1884 essay, "The Negro and the Nation," dates from his more militant period.
The war of the Rebellion settled only one question: It forever settled the question of chattel slavery in this
country. It forever choked the life out of the infamy of the Constitutional right of one man to rob another, by
purchase of his person, or of his honest share of the produce of his own labor. But this was the only
question permanently and irrevocably settled. Nor was this the all-absorbing question involved. The right
of a state to secede from the socalled Union remains where it was when the treasonable shot upon Fort
Sumter aroused the people to all the horrors of internecine war. And the measure of protection which the
national government owes the individual members of states, a right imposed upon it by the adoption of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, remains still to be affirmed.
It was not sufficient that the federal government should expend its blood and treasure to unfetter the limbs
of four millions of people. There can be a slavery more odious, more galling, than mere chattel slavery. It
has been declared to be an act of charity to enforce ignorance upon the slave, since to inform his
intelligence would simply be to make his unnatural lot all the more unbearable. Instance the miserable
existence of .sop, the great black moralist. But this is just what the manumission of the black people of
this country try has accomplished. They are more absolutely under the control of the Southern whites;
they are more systematically robbed of their labor; they are more poorly housed, clothed and fed, than
under the slave regime; and they enjoy, practically, less of the protection of the laws of the state or of the
federal government. When they appeal to the federal government they are told by the Supreme Court to
go to the state authorities --as if they would have appealed to the one had the other given them that
protection to which their sovereign citizenship entitles them!
Practically, there is no law in the United States which extends its protecting arm over the black man and
his rights. He is, like the Irishman in Ireland, an alien in his native land. There is no central or auxiliary
authority to which he can appeal for protection. Wherever he turns he finds the strong arm of constituted
authority powerless to protect him. The farmer and the merchant rob him with absolute immunity, and
irresponsible ruffians murder him without fear of punishment, undeterred by the law, or by public
opinion--which connives at, if it does not inspire, the deeds of lawless violence. Legislatures of states
have framed a code of laws which is more cruel and unjust than any enforced by a former slave state.
The right of franchise has been practically annulled in every one of the former slave states, in not one of
which, today, can a man vote, think, or act as he pleases. He must conform his views to the views of the
men who have usurped every function of government--who, at the point of the dagger, and with shotgun,
have made themselves masters in defiance of every law or precedent in our history as a government.
They have usurped government with the weapons of the cowards and assassins, and they maintain
themselves in power by the most approved practices of the most odious of tyrants. These men have shed
as much innocent blood as the bloody triumvirate of Rome. Today, red handed murderers and assassins
sit in the high places of power, and bask in the smiles of innocence and beauty.
The only solution the Civil War provided, according to Fortune, was to the problem of

A) secession
B) mutually destructive war
C) constitutional rights
D) protection
E) slavery


5. The bright coloration of American coot chicks is an anomaly: although colorful plumage is usually __ to
newborn birds because it may attract predators, among this species it appears to be __ , because parents
are more likely to notice and care for brightly-colored offspring.

A) dangerous . . unnecessary
B) pernicious . . fatal
C) beneficial . . advantageous
D) deleterious . . favorable
E) detrimental . . helpful


질문과 대답:

질문 # 1
정답: E
질문 # 2
정답: C
질문 # 3
정답: B
질문 # 4
정답: E
질문 # 5
정답: E

PSAT-Reading 에 관계 된 시험
PSAT-Math - Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test - Math
PSAT-Reading - Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test - Reading
다른 PSAT 시험
PSAT Certification
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