In Faust, why does Faust, in his “mad striving” to overcome human limitation, reject intellectual knowledge?
A. He hates all intellectuals.
B. He has already sought intellectual understanding and failed.
C. Mephistopheles refuses to support his intellectual ambitions.
D. He cares only about experience through the senses.
Which words are participles that can be used as adjectives in the blanks of this sentence?
Poets are known for their _________ hearts and _________ souls.
A. searching; tortured
B. warm; colorful
C. big; sensitive
D. expansive; tragic
Which kind of figurative language is used in this first line of Psalm 23?
The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.
A. hyperbole
B. simile
C. metaphor
D. personification
Which word best describes the attitude of the speaker in Raleigh's poem?
A. passionate
B. idealistic
C. cynical
D. sad
In Oedipus the King, why does Oedipus ask to be sent away from Thebes, his home?
A. He is afraid the citizens of Thebes will turn on him and kill him.
B. He wants to plot his eventual return to Thebes.
C. He knows it is the only way he will see his children again.
D. He believes he deserves the suffering that would come from this banishment.
Which of these sentences includes a subordinating conjunction?
A. The speaker talks to the Moon, but the Moon does not answer.
B. The Moon looks sad as she climbs the night sky.
C. The speaker believes that the Moon can judge lovers.
D. Although the speaker talks to the Moon, he does not expect an answer.
Who is the speaker in Raleigh's poem?
A. the shepherd speaking in Marlowe's poem
B. the passionate poet speaking in Marlowe's poem
C. the shepherdess addressed in Marlowe's poem
D. a nymph who overhears the Marlowe's speaker addressing his beloved
Psalm 23 can be characterized as lyrical because it:
A. expresses the feelings and observations of a single speaker.
B. tells a story from which a moral can be drawn.
C. has no consistent rhyme scheme.
D. can be accompanied by music.
Which of these details from "The Passionate Shepherd to his Love" are most likely to wither?
A. a thousand fragrant posies
B. melodious birds
C. raging rivers
D. coral clasps
**************
The study of ecology focuses specifically on:
A. the world that is all around us.
B. the world of living things in our planet.
C. the mutual relationship between organisms and the natural world.
D. anything having to do with life.
According to the text, by 2050, it is believed that __________ of the earth's species will become extinct if rain forest destruction continues.
A. 6%
B. 14%
C. 25%
D. 50%
Wetlands are important for all of the following reasons EXCEPT:
A. they provide local habitats for many species of animals and plants.
B. one-third of endangered or threatened species in the U.S. live in or are dependent on them.
C. they harbor the majority of the world's flowering species.
D. they provide purification of local water supplies.
The percentage of China's rivers that were severely polluted in 2000 was __________; in 2002 it was __________.
A. 12%; 20%
B. 22%; 51%
C. 32%; 65%
D. 42%; 71%
The United States is responsible for __________ of the world's total energy consumption.
A. 15%
B. 25%
C. 35%
D. 45%
According to the article "The Grim Payback of Greed" our level of consumerism:
A. is essentially a creation of the 20th century.
B. has declined in the West but is growing rapidly in developing countries.
C. is highly correlated with reported levels of happiness.
D. is tied to our vast wealth, and to forces in the modern world that encourage people to act on their consumption desires.
Indirectly, the "meat-eating quarter of humanity" consumes nearly __________ of the world's grain.
A. 15%
B. 20%
C. 40%
D. 50%
According to the National Academy of Sciences, the Earth's surface temperature has risen about __________ in the past century.
A. 1%
B. 5%
C. 10%
D. 12%
According to the textbook, an individual's most important decision that will effect the climate is:
A. the choice to unplug an extra freezer that is rarely used.
B. looking for the Energy Star on new appliances.
C. selecting a fuel efficient automobile.
D. planting a tree.
Which of the following was NOT a founding principle of the Kyoto Protocol?
A. Scientific uncertainty must not be used to avoid precautionary action.
B. Nations must have common but differentiated responsibilities.
C. All nations must be included in the contract for it to work.
D. Industrial nations must take the lead in addressing the problem.
The article "Young at Risk" proposes that the young of humans and animals are more vulnerable to chemical pollutant exposure due to all of the following reasons EXCEPT that:
A. their brains are less sensitive than those of mature humans and animals.
B. the young eat and breathe more for their body weights than adults, so they get bigger proportional doses of external pollutants.
C. accumulated dioxin slows action to the immune system.
D. they will be getting about 50 times the exposure of an adult during critical developmental stages.
The central problem in the international fishing industry is:
A. "poaching" by foreign vessels in the territorial waters of small nations.
B. laws restricting fishing in waters with the most abundant fish populations.
C. the decline in fish populations due to over-fishing, pollution, and habitat destruction.
D. a lack of enforcement of the Magnuson Fishery Conservation and Management Act.
The reauthorization of the Magnuson Act in 1996 focused on all of the following EXCEPT:
A. overfishing.
B. funding.
C. air quality.
D. habitat degradation.
According to the text, problems associated with the Endangered Species Act include all of the following EXCEPT:
A. its use as a "last-chance" approach to saving endangered species.
B. the creation of conflict between individual property owners and government regulations concerning species.
C. a lack of public support for the Act.
D. ill-defined categories concerning the level of threat posed by human activities to individual species.
Aside from lead, the two air pollutants most hazardous to human health are:
A. sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide.
B. ozone and sulfur dioxide.
C. ozone and fine airborne particulates.
D. nitrous oxides and carbon monoxide.
Which of the following is an ingredient of acid rain?
A. Lead
B. Nitrogen dioxide
C. VOCs
D. Ozone
The process of searching for new natural medicines is called:
A. drug testing.
B. bioprospecting.
C. FDA approval seeking.
D. curative compounding.
The economic value of the rain forest is based upon all of the following EXCEPT:
A. plants that potentially contain the basis for new medicines.
B. its value as a source of raw materials.
C. its value as a food source.
D. its value as a fossil fuel source.
In considering the origins of the top 150 drugs in the United States, __________ origins account for the greates percentage of drugs.
A. synthetic
B. animal
C. plant
D. marine
The central problems mentioned in the case study concerning the Love Canal include all of the following EXCEPT that:
A. developers and the school board knew about the chemical dump, but proceeded anyway.
B. individual citizens are powerless to make a difference in situations concerning waste dumping.
C. there are chemical dumps around the U.S. and the world which are annually increasing. Improved safe dumping and developing/ building standards need to be carefully created and monitored for safety of citizenry.
D. there are many heavily concentrated chemical dumps close to the Niagara River and such leaching and damage to the environment similar to Love Canal could easily again happen.