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Section 2 Guide to Listening 97
Vocabulary Exercise 17
1. (C) warp
9. (A) wake
choice A, “The only trees here are needle-leaf
trees—you know, evergreen trees, what we call
coniferous trees. These trees tend to be small and
far apart.”
9. B, D, The professor mentions the trees’ dark green color
E (which absorbs the sun’s heat), their conical shape
(which prevents too much snow from accumulat-
ing on their branches), and the fact that they are
“evergreen” trees (which allows them to start pho-
tosynthesizing right away in the spring) as adapta-
tions to the cold. There is no mention of their bark
or of their root systems.
10. B According to the professor, “There’s one thing all
these predators have in common, the ones that
live there all year round . . . they all have thick,
warm fur coats . . .”
11. C The professor says, “. . . only young moose are at
risk of being attacked. The adult moose is the
biggest, strongest animal found in the taiga, so a
predator would have to be feeling pretty desperate
to take on one of these.”
12. C, D, According to Professor Speed, Professor Longdell,
B, A who invented the case study method, “insisted
that it was based on a system used by Chinese
philosophers thousands of years ago.” Professor
Longdell first began using the case study method
at Harvard School of Law in the 1870’s. It was first
used at Columbia University Law School “a couple
of years after that.” It was not used at Harvard
School of Business until “probably about 1910,
1912, something like that.”
2. (B) wholesome
10. (B) whiff
3. (B) yields
11. (C) wrinkles
4. (C) wary
12. (A) widespread
5. (A) wares
13. (C) zone
6. (C) witty
14. (B) well-to-do
7. (A) wage
15. (A) woes
8. (C) wisely
Section 2: Guide to Listening
(The TOEFL iBT does not use the letters A, B, C, and D for the
multiple-choice items. However, in these answer keys, A cor-
responds to the first answer choice, B to the second, C to the
third, and D to the fourth.)
Preview Test
Answer Explanation
1. B The student gets some basic information from the
professor about the research paper that she must
write for her geology class. The student then dis-
cusses a possible topic for that paper (predicting
earthquakes through animal behavior) with the
professor.
2. C The student says, “Professor Dixon? I’m Brenda
Pierce. From your Geology 210 class . . . ?” Her
questioning tone of voice indicates that she is not
sure if Professor Dixon recognizes her. (Professor
Dixon says that it is a large class.)
3. A The professor asks, “Did you oversleep? That’s one
of the problems with an eight o’clock class. I
almost overslept myself a couple of times.” This
indicates that the professor assumes (believes)
that the student missed class because she got up
too late.
4. D The student says, “I saw this show on television
about earthquakes, and it said that in uh, China, I
think it was, they did predict an earthquake
because of the way animals were acting.”
5. B The student worries that the professor thinks her
topic is not a good one. However, the professor
says, “. . . just because this theory hasn’t been
proven doesn’t mean you couldn’t write a perfectly
good paper about this topic . . . on the notion that
animals can predict earthquakes. Why not? It
could be pretty interesting. But to do a good job,
you . . . you’ll need to look at some serious studies
in the scientific journals . . .”
6. D The professor says that the taiga is “. . . also called
the ‘boreal forest.’ ”
7. B The professor says, “This sub-zone—well, if you
like variety, you’re not going to feel happy here.
You can travel for miles and see only half a dozen
species of trees. In a few days, we’ll be talking
about the tropical rain forest; now that’s where
you’ll see variety.” The professor is emphasizing
that there are very few species of trees in the
closed forest by comparing it with tropical rain
forests, where there are many species.
8. B, C, The professor says that the closed forest, choice B,
A
13. D
Professor Speed explains exhibits this way:
“Exhibits . . . those are documents, statistical docu-
ments, that explain the situation. They might be,
oh, spreadsheets, sales reports, umm, marketing
projections, anything like that.”
14. B
The best answer is B; the professor is not exactly
sure when case study was first used at Harvard
Business School. That’s why he says, “. . . When
was it? Uh, probably about 1910, 1912, something
like that . . .” Notice that choice A is not correct
because, although he does ask a question (“When
was it?”), he does not ask the class, he asks
himself.
15. A
Professor Speed says that the case study method is
used in many fields of study. “For example, my
wife . . . she teaches over at the School of
Education . . . she uses cases to train teachers.”
16.
Yes
No
Analyze the business situation and
exhibits
Role-play
Run a computer simulation
Give a presentation and write a
report
Visit a real business and attend a
meeting
has “bigger needle-leaf trees growing closer
together.” In the mixed forest, choice C, “The trees
are bigger still here, and you’ll start seeing some
broad-leafed trees, deciduous trees. You’ll see
larch, aspen, especially along rivers and creeks, in
addition to needle-leaf trees.” In the open forest,
The first phrase should be marked Ye s because it is
part of the process of case study. Professor Speed
says that “. . . you have to analyze the situation, the
data . . . Then you have to make decisions about
how to solve these problems.” The second phrase
should also be marked Yes because the professor
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98 Section 2 Guide to Listening
says, “. . . solving the problem usually involves
role-playing, taking on the roles of decision-
makers at the firm.” The third phrase should be
marked No. Computer simulation is another
method of studying business; it is not part of the
case study method. The fourth phrase should be
marked Yes. When Professor Speed is asked by a
student how grades are calculated, Professor
Speed tells him, “You give a presentation, an oral
presentation . . . and then you write a report as
well. You get a grade, a group grade, on the presen-
tation and the report.” The last phrase should be
marked No. Professor Speed does not mention that
students will be visiting real businesses or attend-
ing meetings as part of the case study process.
17. A, D Choice A is correct because Professor Speed says,
“That’s the beauty of this method. It teaches team-
work and cooperation.” Choice D is also a correct
answer because a student asks the professor, “So
that’s why we study cases? I mean, because man-
agers need to be able to make decisions . . . and
solve problems?” and the professor responds,
“Exactly . . . well, that’s a big part of it, anyway.”
18. B The presenter introduces the topic of Venus by
saying, “Okay, to start off, I’m going to tell you
what people, what they used to think about
Venus.” He goes on to explain several old beliefs
about the planet.
19. A, D Choice A is correct. The presenter explains that, in
the distant past, people thought that the object we
now know as Venus was once thought to be two
stars, Phosphorus, the morning star, and
Hesperus, the evening star. Choice D is also cor-
rect. The speaker says, “a lot of people believed, for
some reason, that there were these creatures on
Venus who were superior to us, almost perfect
beings, like angels or something.”
21. B Choice A is true, so it is not the right answer. On
Earth, a day lasts 24 hours, but a day on Venus
lasts 243 Earth days. Choice B is not true and is the
best answer. A year on Venus lasts 225 Earth days,
but an Earth year last 365 Earth days. Choice C is
true. A year on Venus lasts 225 Earth days, but a
day on Venus lasts 243 Earth days. Choice D is also
true. According to the speaker, a day on Venus is
longer than a day on any planet in the solar sys-
tem, including giant gas planets such as Jupiter.
22. A, D, The presenter says that “The first one to go there,
C, B the first probe to go there successfully was Mariner
2 in, uh, 1962,” so choice A should be listed first.
Choice D should be placed in the second box.
According to the presenter, the Soviet probe
Venera 4 was sent to Venus in 196 7. The presenter
says Choice C, Venus Pioneer, was launched in
1978. Choice B, Magellan, should be placed in the
last box because this probe went to Venus in 1990.
However, although Magellan should be listed last,
it is mentioned first in the presentation.
23. C
The presenter says, “Well, Caroline will be giving
the next report, which is about the third planet,
and since we all live here, that should be pretty
interesting.” Since Caroline’s presentation is about
the planet where we all live, it must be about the
Earth.
Lesson 9: Main-Topic and Main-Purpose Questions
Exercise 9.1
3. C
4. A
5. A
Exercise 9.2
1. D
2. B
3. A
4. D
5. C
6. A
7. C
8. B
9. D
20.
Similarity Difference
Their ages
Lesson 10: Factual, Negative Factual,
and Inference Questions
Exercise 10.1
The directions in which
they spin around their axes
Their atmospheric
pressures
1. A
2. D
3. C
4. B
5. C
6. D
7. A
8. B, C
9. D
10. B
11. C
12. A, D
13. A
14. B
15. B, D
16. D
17. D
18. D
19. A
20. C
21. A, B
22. D
The presence of volcanoes
Their sizes
The first phrase is a similarity. The presenter says,
“Venus is about the same size as Earth.” The sec-
ond phrase should be considered a difference
between the two planets. The presenter says, “All
the planets of the solar system turn on their axis in
the same direction as they orbit the Sun. All except
Venus, of course!” The third phrase is also a differ-
ence. According to the presenter, the atmosphere
on Venus is “really thick . . . so thick, it’s like being
at the bottom of an ocean on Earth.” The fourth
phrase should be considered a similarity. The pre-
senter says that the space probe Magellan “found
out that there are all these volcanoes on Venus,
just like there are on Earth.” The last phrase should
likewise be considered a similarity because the
presenter says that “Venus is about the same size
as Earth.”
Exercise 10.2
1. A, C
2. B
3. C
4. B
5. A, D
6. D
7. A
8. C
9. A
10. A, D, E
11. B
12. D
13. A
14. A
15. B
16. B
17. A, C
18. C
19. D
20. B
21. B, D
22. C
23. D
24. A, D
25. B
26. A
27. B
28. D
29. C, D
30. A
31. C
32. D
33. C
34. B
35. B
36. A
37. B
38. D
39. B, C
40. A
41. D
42. C
1. C
2. B
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Section 2 Guide to Listening 99
Lesson 11: Purpose, Method,
and Attitude Questions
Exercise 11.1
2.
Yes
No
1. D
2. A
3. B
4. A
5. C
6. A
Housing is less expensive in New
Urban communities than in typical
suburbs.
There is less crime in New Urban
communities.
Exercise 11.2
Most New Urban communities are
conveniently located close to large
suburban shopping malls.
1. C
2. C
3. D
4. A
5. D
6. B
7. C
8. A
9. C
10. A
11. B
12. D
13. B
Residents of New Urban
communities get more exercise.
Lesson 12: Replay Questions
Exercise 12.1
4. T
5. F
6. T
7. T
8. F
9. T
10. F
11. T
12. F
Most houses in New Urban
communities feature garages that
allow direct access to the house.
There is less air pollution in New
Urban communities.
1. A
2. A
3. B
4. B
5. D
6. A
7. D
8. C
9. A
10. C
11. D
12. C
13. B
3.
Myth Reality
It created the first democratic
society in England.
It confirmed the rights of the
English barons.
Exercise 12.3
1. D
2. B
3. D
4. A
5. C
6. B
7. D
8. C
9. A
10. B
11. A
12. D
13. B
14. B
15. C
It established the first British
Parliament.
It established courts in which
citizens were tried by their peers.
Lesson 13: Ordering and Matching Questions
Exercise 13.1
It was signed by King John
himself.
1. C, D, A, B
2. B, A, C
3. C, A, B
4. B, D, C, A
5. C, B, A
6. A, D, B, C
7. A, C, B
8. B, A, C
9. D, B, A, C
10. D, C, A, B
11. B, C, A
12. A, B, C
13. C, A, D, B
4.
Yes
No
Tend to be found in horizontal
caves with small entrances
Contain only herbivore fossils
Lesson 14: Completing Charts
Exercise 14.1
1.
May have had both herbivores and
carnivores living in them
Yes
No
Usually have a greater variety of
fossils than natural traps
Plentiful parking is provided in large
parking lots.
Generally contain well-preserved
fossils
Residents can walk easily to work or
shopping areas.
5.
Yes
No
Residences, shops, and offices are
all found on the same block.
This cave was discovered by
professional palaeontologists.
Communities are located only in
large urban centers.
Animals that fell in here died from
the impact of the fall.
Streets are generally laid out in a
grid pattern.
Its entrance was covered by plants.
This cave features the fossil bones
of a previously unknown giant cat.
This cave contains a greater variety
of fossils than most natural traps.
1. T
2. F
3. T
Exercise 12.2
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100 Section 2 Guide to Listening
6.
Ptolemaic Copernican
System
Listening Review Test
Answer Explanation
1. B Scott tells Professor Calhoun, “I’ve decided, uh, I’m
going to drop your biochemistry class.”
2. D Scott says that Professor Delaney has advised him
to drop one class. Professor Calhoun says, “With
all due respect to Doctor Delaney, I couldn’t agree
with him less.” This means that she respects
Professor Delaney but completely disagrees with
his advice.
3. A Professor Calhoun agrees that the unit on atomic
structure, etc., was difficult, but she says, “. . .
here’s the good news! That’s as hard as it gets! It’s
all downhill from there!” She means that the rest of
the course will be easier.
4. D Professor Calhoun suggests that Scott get tutoring
(private instruction) from her teaching assistant,
Peter Kim.
5. C Professor Calhoun encourages Scott to stay in the
class. She tells him that she thinks he can pass the
class if he gets a little help. She says, “You’re going
to do just fine!”
6. A Stanley asks Martha why she has come to the
library, and she tells him that she has been “using
the Encyclopedia of Art, looking up some terms for
my art history class.”
7. C Stanley has lost some index cards with his research
notes written on them.
8. B In a surprised tone of voice, Martha asks Stanley,
“You really like to get a jump on things, don’t you?”
To get a jump on things means “to get an early
start.”
9. C Stanley says, “The, uh, book stacks . . . that’s what
they call the main part of the library, where most
of the books are shelved.”
10. A Stanley thinks that his note cards are probably in
the periodicals room (where journals and maga-
zines are kept), and he says, “Let me run up to the
periodicals room and check.” After he finds his
notes, he and Martha will probably go to a coffee
shop on Williams Street.
11. B, C, Choice B is correct because the professor says one
E sign of writing readiness is “making random marks
on the page, sometimes accompanied by draw-
ings.” Choice C is also correct. The professor says,
“Another sign of writing readiness . . . they ask
adults to help them write something by guiding
their hands.” Choice E is correct because the pro-
fessor says, “Some kids produce symbols that look
more like printing, but with invented letters.
Choice A is NOT correct. The professor suggests
that children build up their hand muscles by using
scissors and modeling clay, but this is not given as
a sign of writing readiness. Choice D is not correct
because this is a sign of the symbolic stage, not of
writing readiness.
12. C According to the professor, “Many experts divide
the process into more stages.”
13. B, A, The professor says, “In this system, the first stage
D, C is the symbolic stage.” Later she says, “The next
stage of writing is called the phonemic stage.”
Then she says, “After this comes the transitional
stage.” Finally she says, “Okay, the fourth stage is
called the conventional stage.”
System
This system is also
known as the
“heliocentric system.”
“Epicycles” were used
to help explain
this system.
This system became
part of the medieval
system of belief.
This system was
disproved by the
discovery of the
phases of Venus.
This system provided
a good picture of the
solar system but not
of the universe.
According to this
system, music was
generated by the
movement of
crystal spheres.
7.
Component
ABC
A consumer visits an Internet
site to get more information
about tires.
A man feels a bicycle will make
his daughter happy.
A customer buys groceries at
the store.
An investor studies the market for
art before buying a painting.
A woman orders a sandwich and
a drink at a fast-food restaurant.
8.
Value- Ego-
expressive defensive
function
function
May involve a product
that protects a consumer
from some threat
May involve a product
that consumers believe
will make them more
popular
May involve a product
that consumers believe
will make people
dislike them
May involve a product
that is harmful to the
consumer who buys it
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Section 2 Guide to Listening 101
14. B The professor says, “It’s easier for kids to learn to
write in, say, Finnish, or Spanish, which are more
or less phonetic languages.”
15. C Choice A would likely be produced by a child in
the writing readiness phase. Choice B includes
only the most dominant sounds but does not
involve separate words. This was probably written
by a child at the phonemic stage. Choice D
involves only some minor spelling mistakes and
represents a child at the conventional stage.
Choice C, the best answer, is a transition between
phonemic and conventional. It involves separate
words, and the writer makes an effort to record all
the sounds in the words.
16. B, C The professor emphasizes two points about teach-
ing writing skills: that “writing activities should be
fun ” and that “communication should be the main
focus for writing.”
17. D This lecture provides a basic description of double
stars.
18. C According to the professor, “Most astronomers
think about a quarter of all stars are binary stars.”
She also says that “some astronomers estimate as
many as 75% of all stars will turn out to be binary
stars.”
19. AA comes is the dimmer star in a double star. It is
the Latin word for companion. (The brighter star
is called the primary. )
20. C Mizar-Alcor is a “double-double star,” according to
the professor, because both Mizar and Alcor are
binary stars.
21. B The professor compares a double star having stars
of contrasting colors to “two jewels of different col-
ors lying on a piece of black velvet.”
22. C, B, Albireo is given as an example of a double star in
A
27.
Yes
No
Increase market share in an SBU
and turn a cash cow into a star
Reduce investment in an SBU and
collect short-term profits
Buy a well-performing SBU from
another company, creating a
new star
Sell a poorly performing SBU and
get rid of a dog
Raise prices on an SBU’s product
and change a problem child to a
cash cow
which the two stars appear to be of two different
colors. Algol is given as an example of an eclipsing
binary, in which one star sometimes blocks the
light from the other star. The professor says that
Mizar-Alcor is “one of those optical pairs I was
talking about.”
The first choice should be marked Yes. This is the
strategy Langfield-Smith calls building. The sec-
ond choice should also be marked Yes. This is the
strategy Langfield-Smith calls harvesting. The pro-
fessor doesn’t list buying a star as one of Langfield-
Smith’s strategies, so you should mark the third
choice No. The fourth choice, which Langfield
Smith calls divesting, should be marked Yes.
However, the professor does not give raising prices
on an SBU as one of Langfield-Smith’s strategies,
so the last choice should be marked No.
28. A He says that, “In my opinion, though, dogs may
have a place in a portfolio.”
29. B, C We know that humans became aware of the
humpback whale song in 1968, so choice A is not
correct, and we know that Roger Payne discovered
that humpbacks sang, so choice D is not correct.
The professor says, “We still aren’t exactly sure how
they produce the sounds,” so B is a good choice.
Choice C is also a good choice. A student says, “I’d
like to know what these songs mean” and the pro-
fessor responds, “Well, you’re not the only one who
would like to know that!” There are some theories,
but apparently no one definitely knows the mean-
ing of the whales’ songs.
23. C
The professor says that the method he uses to clas-
sify SBUs is called the BCG method because it was
developed by the B oston C onsulting G roup. It is
also called the “Boston Box” and the “Growth-
Share Matrix.” It is NOT called the General
Electric/Shell method, which is another system for
analyzing a product portfolio.
30.
Low- High-
frequency frequency
sound
sound
Travels a long distance
Probably carries a lot of
information
24. C
The professor says that “SBU #3’s shoes aren’t
selling all that well. This SBU is called a problem
child.
Has a simple structure
Is generally considered
the “song” of the
humpback whale
25. D
The professor implies that the term cash cow is
used because this type of SBU provides “a depend-
able flow of ‘milk’ ” (meaning profit ) for a
company.
The low-frequency sounds can be heard from at
least 100 kilometers away, so you should check
low-frequency for the first choice. The high-
frequency sounds “seem to contain a lot of infor-
mation,” so you should check high-frequency for
the second choice. The low-frequency sound has
“a relatively simple structure,” so you should check
low-frequency for the third choice. The high-
frequency sounds are “what we generally think of
when we think of humpbacks’ songs,” so you
should check high-frequency for the fourth
choice.
26. B
A marketing manager would be most pleased by a
move from a “dog” to a “cash cow” because a dog
is both low-growth and low-market-share whereas
a cash cow is low-growth but high-market-share,
and a cash cow brings in substantial profits.
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