Unit 9 Practice test B - Lewis

Unit 9 Practice test B
Multiple Choice
Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.
____
1. One of the three major concerns of developmental psychology centers around the issue of
a. identity or intimacy.
b. continuity or stages.
c. imprinting or object permanence.
d. conservation or egocentrism.
e. longitudinal or cross-sectional.
____
2. One of the three major issues in developmental psychology involves the study of
a. habituation.
b. primary sex characteristics.
c. infantile amnesia.
d. personality stability.
e. perception.
____
3. Newborn infants typically prefer their mother's voice over their father's voice because
a. their rooting reflex is naturally triggered by higher-pitched sounds.
b. they rapidly habituate to lower-pitched male voices.
c. they become familiar with their mother's voice before they are born.
d. they form an emotional attachment to their mother during breast-feeding.
e. they have difficulty hearing lower-pitched voices during the first few days after
birth.
____
4. Sierra, a 28-year-old heroin addict, is pregnant. Her baby will be born
a. with schizophrenia.
b. a heroin addict.
c. visually impaired.
d. with Down syndrome.
e. hyperactive.
____
5. The symptoms of fetal alcohol syndrome demonstrate that alcohol is a
a. teratogen.
b. form of DNA.
c. hallucinogen.
d. neurotransmitter.
e. placebo.
____
6. When a pregnant woman drinks heavily, she puts her unborn child at risk for
a. autism.
b. fetal alcohol syndrome.
c. neurogenesis.
d. Alzheimer's disease.
e. Asperger syndrome.
____
7. When Joan touched her infant's cheek, he turned his head toward the side that was touched and
opened his mouth. Joan was eliciting the
a. startle reaction.
b. rooting reflex.
c. grasping reflex.
d. attachment reflex.
e. attention reflex.
____
8. Babies are born with several reflexes for getting food. One of these is to
a. withdraw a limb to escape pain.
b. turn the head away from a cloth placed over the face.
c. open the mouth in search of a nipple when touched on the cheek.
d. look longer at facelike images than at a solid disk.
e. avoid overly sweet foods.
____
9. Three-month-old Andrew was obviously startled by the first ring of the telephone, but with each
subsequent ring he seemed to become less reactive. This best illustrates the process of
a. accommodation.
b. conservation.
c. imprinting.
d. habituation.
e. attachment.
____ 10. Research indicates that 3-week-old human infants can distinguish
a. their mother's voice from that of a female stranger.
b. differences in light intensity but not differences in shape.
c. their mother's face from that of a female stranger.
d. differences in sound intensity but not differences in sound quality.
e. their mother's touch from that of a female stranger.
____ 11. Kristen is a normal, healthy newborn. Research indicates that
a. she has most of the brain cells she is ever going to have.
b. the neural connections that will enable her to think and talk are already completely
formed.
c. she is already capable of forming permanent lifelong memories.
d. her medulla and limbic system are almost fully mature.
e. the dendrites in her brain are crossing synaptic gaps to make complete connections.
____ 12. The immaturity of an infant's nervous system is best demonstrated by its limited
a. teratogens.
b. number of brain cells.
c. imprinting.
d. neural networks.
e. neurotransmitters.
____ 13. Biological growth processes that are relatively uninfluenced by experience and that enable orderly
changes in behavior are referred to as
a. continuity.
b.
c.
d.
e.
imprinting.
generativity.
maturation.
attachment.
____ 14. Horace, the youngest child of a high school athletic director, was able to roll over at 3 months, crawl
at 6 months, and walk at 12 months. This ordered sequence of motor development was largely due to
a. habituation.
b. maturation.
c. responsive parenting.
d. imprinting.
e. conditioning.
____ 15. Identical twins typically begin walking on nearly the same day. This best illustrates the importance
of _______ to motor skills.
a. responsive parenting
b. genes
c. accommodation
d. secure attachment
e. habituation
____ 16. The relative lack of neural interconnections in the association areas at the time of birth is most likely
to contribute to
a. infantile amnesia.
b. habituation.
c. insecure attachment.
d. stranger anxiety.
e. newborn reflexes.
____ 17. A concept or framework that organizes and interprets information is called a(n)
a. assimilation.
b. attachment.
c. temperament.
d. schema.
e. neural network.
____ 18. Nageeb thought all nurses were young females until a middle-aged male nurse took care of him.
Nageeb's altered conception of a “nurse” illustrates the process of
a. habituation.
b. assimilation.
c. accommodation.
d. attachment.
e. imprinting.
____ 19. When Tommy's mother hides his favorite toy under a blanket, he acts as though it no longer exists
and makes no attempt to retrieve it. Tommy is clearly near the beginning of Piaget's ________ stage.
a. sensorimotor
b. formal operational
c. concrete operational
d. preoperational
e. conventional
____ 20. Although Mr. Tong was obviously busy reading an absorbing novel, his 5-year-old daughter kept
interrupting him with comments and questions about the TV cartoons she was watching. Before Mr.
Tong becomes irritated with his daughter for being inconsiderate, he should be alerted to Piaget's
concept of
a. object permanence.
b. habituation.
c. conservation.
d. egocentrism.
e. accommodation.
____ 21. A child's realization that others may have beliefs that the child knows to be false best illustrates that
the child is not completely
a. egocentric.
b. imprinted.
c. habituated.
d. accommodated.
e. postconventional.
____ 22. Preschoolers' acquisition of a theory of mind suggests that Piaget overestimated young children's
a. egocentrism.
b. habituation.
c. stranger anxiety.
d. sense of object permanence.
e. attachment.
____ 23. Four-year-olds are not completely egocentric and 5-year-olds can exhibit some understanding of
conservation. This indicates that Piaget may have underestimated the
a. importance of critical periods in early life.
b. role of motivation in cognitive development.
c. continuity of cognitive development.
d. importance of early attachment experiences.
e. relationship between schema and children's self-concept.
____ 24. Providing children with a safe haven in times of stress contributes most directly to
a. habituation.
b. stranger anxiety.
c. object permanence.
d. secure attachment.
e. egocentrism.
____ 25. The presence of a secure base and safe haven infants can use when distressed has the greatest effect
on the development of which of the following?
a. attachment
b. maturation
c. self-concept
d. critical period
e. temperament
____ 26. The Harlows' studies of infant monkeys raised with artificial mothers suggest that body contact
promotes
a. egocentrism.
b. attachment.
c. stranger anxiety.
d. conservation.
e. schemas.
____ 27. A critical period is a phase during which
a. children frequently disobey and resist their parents.
b. children become able to think hypothetically and reason abstractly.
c. parents frequently show impatience with a child's slowness in becoming toilet
trained.
d. certain events have a particularly strong impact on development.
e. parents form important attachments with caregivers.
____ 28. The process by which certain birds form attachments during a critical period very early in life is
called
a. imprinting.
b. assimilation.
c. habituation.
d. bonding.
e. the rooting reflex.
____ 29. Unlike ducklings, children do not imprint. Their fondness for certain people, however, is fostered by
a. conservation.
b. egocentrism.
c. mere exposure.
d. infantile amnesia.
e. a critical period.
____ 30. Carol is distressed because post-childbirth complications prevented her from being in close physical
contact with her child during his first few hours of life. Carol should be told that
a. human infants do not have well-defined critical periods for the formation of a
mother-infant attachment.
b. physical contact with her infant immediately after birth would not contribute to the
development of mother-infant attachment.
c. infants should be left physically undisturbed during the first few hours of life so
they can rest.
d. as long as she can breast-feed her baby, no lasting damage will be done.
e. infants form attachments based mostly on nourishment, not physical contact.
____ 31. When placed in strange situations without their artificial mothers, the Harlows' infant monkeys
demonstrated signs of
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
insecure attachment.
egocentrism.
basic trust.
curiosity.
accommodation.
____ 32. Instead of happily exploring the attractive toys located in the pediatrician's waiting room, little
Sandra tenaciously clings to her mother's skirt. Sandra most clearly shows signs of
a. habituation.
b. egocentrism.
c. insecure attachment.
d. the rooting reflex.
e. object permanence.
____ 33. A mother who is slow in responding to her infant's cries of distress is most likely to encourage
a. habituation.
b. conservation.
c. insecure attachment.
d. object permanence.
e. egocentrism.
____ 34. Dr. Ensing studies the reactions of very young children who are briefly separated from their mothers
while in an unfamiliar setting. It is most likely that Dr. Ensing is conducting research on
a. habituation.
b. attachment.
c. conservation.
d. egocentrism.
e. the rooting reflex.
____ 35. A mother who consistently responds supportively to her infant's cries for care and protection is most
likely to encourage
a. egocentrism.
b. habituation.
c. stranger anxiety.
d. secure attachment.
e. conservation.
____ 36. Lynnae is usually timid and fearful, whereas her sister Eileen is typically relaxed and cheerful. The
two sisters are most strikingly different in
a. brain maturation.
b. gender schemas.
c. intelligence.
d. physical health.
e. temperament.
____ 37. A child's temperament is likely to be
a. difficult to observe.
b. stable over time.
c. a product of parenting style.
d. a reflection of his or her gender schema.
e. different as an infant than as a teenager.
____ 38. Exceptionally inhibited and fearful infants tend to become introverted adolescents. This best
illustrates the long-term stability of
a. temperament.
b. the critical period.
c. gender schemas.
d. the X chromosome.
e. self-concept.
____ 39. Erik Erikson suggested that a sense of basic trust during infancy results from
a. habituation.
b. object permanence.
c. responsive parenting.
d. inborn temperament.
e. accommodation.
____ 40. When golden hamsters were repeatedly threatened and attacked while young, they suffered long-
term changes in
a. object permanence.
b. brain chemistry.
c. the rooting reflex.
d. maturation.
e. habituation.
____ 41. Children who experience ________ have an increased likelihood of receiving both lower-quality day
care and authoritarian parenting.
a. stranger anxiety
b. infantile amnesia
c. family poverty
d. crystallized intelligence
e. critical period
____ 42. Researchers have sneakily dabbed rouge on young children's noses in order to study the
developmental beginnings of
a. egocentrism.
b. object permanence.
c. habituation.
d. conservation.
e. self-awareness.
____ 43. Mrs. Carmichael secretly dabs some lipstick on the nose of her 2-year-old son and then allows him
to see his face in a mirror. The child is most likely to
a. touch his own nose.
b. touch the mirror at the point where the lipstick shows.
c. wave at his mirror image as if it were another child.
d. assimilate the lipstick mark into his existing self-concept.
e. become upset because he doesn't recognize his image.
____ 44. Parents who are demanding and yet sensitively responsive to their children are said to be
a. authoritarian.
b. conservative.
c. egocentric.
d. permissive.
e. authoritative.
____ 45. Psychologists describe child-rearing in which rules are imposed without explanation as a(n)
________ style.
a. authoritative
b. egocentric
c. permissive
d. authoritarian
e. secure attachment
____ 46. Authoritarian parents are especially likely to be
a. inflexible.
b. educated.
c. permissive.
d. trusting.
e. egocentric.
____ 47. The McDougals use harsh discipline on their children and demand unquestioning obedience.
Psychologists are likely to characterize the McDougals as ________ parents.
a. authoritarian
b. egocentric
c. permissive
d. authoritative
e. preconventional
____ 48. Parents in Asian cultures are more likely than parents in Westernized cultures to encourage children
to
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
pick out and purchase their own clothes.
participate in household activities.
publicly protest repressive government policies.
establish close friendships with ethnically diverse groups of people.
choose a personally fulfilling career path.
____ 49. Men and women are most likely to differ in their
a. happiness.
b. intelligence.
c. self-esteem.
d. aggressiveness.
e. social identity.
____ 50. Which of the following would you MOST likely observe on extended visits to foreign countries?
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
men and women earning approximately the same salaries
more women than men holding elected offices
more men than women engaged in fistfights
men and women sharing equally in the duties of child-rearing
more men than women raising children alone
____ 51. Compared with males, females are more likely to base their sense of personal identity on their
a. gender.
b. social relationships.
c. educational accomplishments.
d. socially distinctive personality traits.
e. income.
____ 52. Male self-identity is to ________ as female self-identity is to ________.
a. individuality; roles
b. X chromosome; Y chromosome
c. gender typing; gender schemas
d. independence; interdependence
e. assimilation; accommodation
____ 53. Women are more likely than men to
a. criticize and insult their marital partner.
b. stare at people who make them angry.
c. interrupt others while they are talking.
d. misperceive simple friendliness as a sexual come-on.
e. tend and befriend.
____ 54. In agricultural societies, children typically socialize into more distinct gender roles than do children
in nomadic societies. This best illustrates that gender-role differences between social groups result
from
a. cultural influence.
b. a pruning process.
c. imprinting.
d. individualism.
e. maturation.
____ 55. Children's tendency to classify toys and songs as either masculine or feminine is most likely to
facilitate the process of
a. maturation.
b. individualism.
c. gender typing.
d. conservation.
e. imprinting.
____ 56. Mr. Eskenazi frowns when his son cries but hugs his daughter when she cries. Mr. Eskenazi's
contribution to the gender typing of his children would most likely be highlighted by
a. twin studies.
b. social learning theorists.
c. adoption studies.
d. evolutionary psychologists.
e. longitudinal studies.
____ 57. Children tend to organize their worlds into male and female categories. This best illustrates their use
of
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
the pruning process.
theory of mind.
gender schemas.
the male answer syndrome.
social identity.
____ 58. For children from impoverished environments, stimulating educational experiences during early
childhood are most likely to
a. decrease the total time needed for maturation.
b. decrease their emotional attachment to their own parents.
c. have no discernable effect on subsequent academic performance.
d. prevent the degeneration of activated connections between neurons.
e. increase the intensity of their parental imprinting.
____ 59. Unused neural connections in the brain are reduced through a process of
a. assimilation.
b. accommodation.
c. conservation.
d. pruning.
e. imprinting.
____ 60. Children raised in the same family are not especially likely to have similar personalities. This most
clearly implies that we should be cautious about attributing personality to
a. gender schemas.
b. parental influences.
c. temperament.
d. peer influences.
e. traits.
____ 61. Parents can most effectively increase their influence on their children by
a. encouraging their children to achieve athletic success.
b. helping to select their children's neighborhood and schools.
c. spacing the birth of their children over a large number of years.
d. encouraging them to value individualism.
e. using authoritarian rather than permissive parenting styles.
____ 62. The term puberty refers to the period of
a. formal operations and the development of conventional morality.
b. late adolescence when self-identity is formed.
c. rapid physical development and the onset of reproductive capability.
d. sexual attraction to the opposite-sex parent.
e. attachment to parents that ends the beginning of adolescence.
____ 63. Puberty is most closely related to the onset of
a. menopause.
b. menarche.
c. crystallized intelligence.
d. conventional morality.
e. dementia.
____ 64. The first ejaculation is to an adolescent boy as ________ is to an adolescent girl.
a. intimacy
b. puberty
c. the first kiss
d. menarche
e. secure attachment
____ 65. Nonreproductive sexual characteristics such as the deepened male voice and male facial hair are
called
a. masculine prototypes.
b. secondary sex characteristics.
c. primary sex characteristics.
d. teratogens.
e. schema.
____ 66. Which of the following is an example of a secondary sex characteristic?
a. female ovaries
b. male facial hair
c. the male grip
d. female height
e. male testes
____ 67. The term menarche refers to the
a. onset of male sexual potency.
b. first menstrual period.
c. development of the primary sex characteristics.
d. cessation of menstruation.
e. end of the critical period.
____ 68. Boys who mature at an early age tend to be more
a. physically uncoordinated.
b. sexually inhibited.
c. popular and self-assured.
d. academically successful.
e. socially inhibited.
____ 69. Who is likely to be the most popular student in the fifth-grade class?
a. Helmut, who is the tallest boy in the class
b. Jeff, who is the statistician for the basketball team
c. Hara, who is below average in height and physical maturity
d. Sally, who is the most sexually mature girl in the class
e. Rufus, who is just exiting the critical period
____ 70. The improved judgment and impulse control that occur as adolescents grow older is made possible
by the development of
a. primary sex characteristics.
b. secondary sex characteristics.
c. the frontal lobes.
d. the limbic system.
e. object permanence.
____ 71. The ability to think logically about hypothetical situations is indicative of the ________ stage of
development.
a. conventional
b. preconventional
c. preoperational
d. formal operational
e. postconventional
____ 72. Even though smoking marijuana would reduce the pain associated with her chronic medical
condition, Juanita believes it would be morally wrong because it is prohibited by the laws of her
state. Kohlberg would suggest that Juanita demonstrates a(n) _______ morality.
a. conventional
b. preoperational
c. preconventional
d. postconventional
e. operational
____ 73. According to Kohlberg, postconventional morality involves
a. behavior based on self-interest.
b. affirmation of self-defined ethical principles.
c. strong concern for social approval.
d. unquestioning obedience to authority figures.
e. hypothetical reasoning and problem solving.
____ 74. Many people would find it more morally repulsive to kill someone by thrusting a knife into his or
her body than by shooting him or her with a gun from a distance. This is best explained in terms of
a. Erikson's psychosocial development theory.
b. Piaget's cognitive development theory.
c. Haidt's social intuitionist theory.
d. Kohlberg's moral development theory.
e. Ainsworth's attachment theory.
____ 75. Today's character education programs teach children to experience
a. habituation.
b. object permanence.
c. empathy.
d. maturation.
e. temperament.
____ 76. According to Erikson, infancy is to trust as adolescence is to
a. autonomy.
b. identity.
c. generativity.
d. integrity.
e. competence.
____ 77. According to Erikson, isolation is to intimacy as role confusion is to
a. mistrust.
b. guilt.
c. competence.
d. inferiority.
e. identity.
____ 78. Lolita vacillates between acting rebellious toward her parents and high school teachers and behaving
with compliance and respect. Erikson would have suggested that Lolita's inconsistency illustrates
a. separation anxiety.
b. role confusion.
c. egocentricity.
d. stagnation.
e. inferiority.
____ 79. An elaborate ceremony used to celebrate a person's emergence into adulthood is an example of a
a. schema.
b. critical period.
c. secure attachment.
d. rite of passage.
e. self-concept.
____ 80. Today's earlier female sexual maturation is especially likely among
a. normal-weight girls in father-absent homes.
b. overweight girls in father-absent homes.
c. underweight girls in father-present homes.
d. normal-weight girls in father-present homes.
e. overweight girls in father-present homes.
____ 81. Menopause is associated with a reduction in
a. adrenaline.
b. testosterone.
c. estrogen.
d. acetylcholine.
e. dopamine.
____ 82. Menopause refers to
a. the cessation of menstruation.
b. the loss of male sexual potency.
c. irregular timing of menstrual periods.
d. the loss of sexual interest in late adulthood.
e. the beginning of female fertility.
____ 83. African infants have had a greater chance of survival if they have a living maternal grandmother who
is without young children of her own. This fact has been used to support an evolutionary explanation
of
a. conservation.
b. habituation.
c. stranger anxiety.
d. menopause.
e. assimilation.
____ 84. Judy's doctor notes that she is no longer able to become pregnant. It is most likely that Judy is
experiencing
a. menarche.
b. dementia.
c. menopause.
d. autism.
e. a critical period.
____ 85. Aging cells may die without being replaced due to the shortening of
a. critical periods.
b. teratogens.
c. plaques.
d. telomeres.
e. X chromosomes.
____ 86. Evolutionary biologists have suggested that the symptoms of physiological degeneration that
accompany old age in humans are a
a. by-product of crystallized intelligence.
b. genetically predisposed outcome.
c. hindrance to natural selection.
d. threat to the survival of the human species.
e. problem related to secondary sex characteristics.
____ 87. In one 15-year period, more Americans died on the two days after Christmas than on the two days
before Christmas. It has been suggested that this illustrates
a. a death-deferral phenomenon.
b. a critical period.
c. terminal decline.
d. habituation.
e. accommodation.
____ 88. Research on people aged 65 and over has shown that
a. most older people become increasingly fearful of death as they age.
b. most older people experience a noticeable loss of visual sensitivity.
c. most victims of Alzheimer's disease can reverse the disorder by becoming
physically active.
d. about 25 percent of those over 65 reside in health care institutions such as nursing
homes.
e. older adults experience a marked decline in sexual activity.
____ 89. Physical exercise helps maintain the ________ protecting the ends of chromosomes.
a. telomeres
b. myelin
c. teratogens
d. gray matter
e. chromosomes
____ 90. Researchers have detected unusually diffuse brain activity while people suffering from ________ are
trying to memorize words.
a. autism
b. fetal alcohol syndrome
c. Alzheimer's disease
d. infantile amnesia
e. fluid intelligence.
____ 91. Which of the following terms refers to a person's accumulated knowledge and verbal skills?
a. fluid intelligence
b. concrete operational intelligence
c. formal operational intelligence
d. crystallized intelligence
e. postconventional intelligence
____ 92. Which of the following terms refers to a person's ability to reason speedily and abstractly?
a. crystallized intelligence
b. concrete operational intelligence
c. sensorimotor intelligence
d. fluid intelligence
e. postconventional intelligence
____ 93. Those who criticize theories of age-linked adult developmental stages are most likely to emphasize
the importance of ________ on adult development.
a. fluid intelligence
b. genetic predispositions
c. secondary sex characteristics
d. formal operational thought
e. the social clock
____ 94. The age at which people are expected to leave home, get a job, and marry has changed dramatically
in Wallonia over the past 50 years. Developmentalists would say that the country's ________ has
been altered.
a. social clock
b. developmental norm
c. maturation cycle
d. family calendar
e. social identity
____ 95. The term social clock refers to
a. the culturally preferred time to leave home, marry, have children, and retire.
b. the pace of life in a culture as assessed by its level of industrialization.
c. the average age of people in different social groups and organizations.
d. the different ways in which societies evaluate the physical and cognitive changes
accompanying the aging process.
e. the average age at which community members achieve the formal operational
stage.
____ 96. Kathryn and Rafael's third and last child is leaving home for college next year. Their empty nest is
likely to be a(n) ________ place.
a. depressed
b. happy
c. anxious
d. boring
e. stressful
____ 97. Mary believes that cognitive development is a matter of gradual and almost imperceptible changes
over time. Her viewpoint is most directly relevant to the issue of
a. nature or nurture.
b. behavior or mental processes.
c. continuity or stages.
d. fluid or crystallized intelligence.
e. concrete or operational stages.
____ 98. Researchers who emphasize learning and experience tend to view development as
a. a continuous process, while those who emphasize maturation often view
development as a sequence of stages.
b. a sequence of stages, while those who emphasize maturation often view
development as a continuous process.
c. a cognitive process, while those who emphasize maturation often view
development as a social process.
d. a social process, while those who emphasize maturation often view development
as a cognitive process.
e. an emotional process, while those who emphasize maturation often view
development in discrete stages.
____ 99. As boys with explosive tempers grow older, they are especially likely to have difficulty maintaining
good jobs and happy marriages. This fact is most relevant to the issue of
a. conventional or postconventional morality.
b. fluid or crystallized intelligence.
c. stability or change.
d. cross-sectional or longitudinal studies.
e. concrete or formal operations.
____ 100. The fact that many happy and well-adjusted adults were once rebellious and unhappy as adolescents
is most relevant to the issue of
a. continuity or stages.
b.
c.
d.
e.
preconventional or postconventional morality.
fluid or crystallized intelligence.
stability or change.
nature or nurture.
Unit 9 Practice test B
Answer Section
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42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
54.
55.
56.
57.
58.
59.
60.
61.
62.
63.
64.
65.
66.
67.
68.
69.
70.
71.
72.
73.
74.
75.
76.
77.
78.
79.
80.
81.
82.
83.
84.
85.
86.
87.
88.
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
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ANS:
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E
A
E
D
A
A
B
D
C
B
D
E
A
C
B
C
D
D
B
B
C
B
D
B
B
B
C
A
C
D
A
B
C
C
B
E
B
D
B
C
A
D
C
D
B
A
B
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
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DIF:
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DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
Medium
Medium
Easy
Easy
Medium
Easy
Medium
Easy
Medium
Easy
Difficult
Easy
Easy
Medium
Medium
Easy
Difficult
Easy
Medium
Medium
Easy
Easy
Medium
Easy
Easy
Easy
Medium
Medium
Medium
Easy
Medium
Medium
Difficult
Easy
Medium
Medium
Difficult
Medium
Medium
Easy
Easy
Medium
Easy
Medium
Medium
Medium
Medium
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89.
90.
91.
92.
93.
94.
95.
96.
97.
98.
99.
100.
ANS:
ANS:
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ANS:
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ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
A
C
D
D
E
A
A
B
C
A
C
D
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
Medium
Difficult
Easy
Easy
Medium
Easy
Easy
Medium
Medium
Difficult
Medium
Medium
REF:
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