Unit 9 Practice Test C - Lewis

Unit 9 Practice Test C
Multiple Choice
Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.
____
1. Boys first begin producing sperm during
a. embryonic development.
b. fetal development.
c. the first year after birth.
d. puberty.
e. early childhood.
____
2. After about 10 days, a fertilized egg cell attaches to the uterine wall. What is the developing human
called at this point in development?
a. zygote
b. fetus
c. embryo
d. teratogen
e. Y chromosome
____
3. The heart begins to beat during the ________ period of prenatal development.
a. embryonic
b. fetal
c. zygotic
d. ovular
e. conceptual.
____
4. 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.
____
5. Harmful chemicals or viruses that can be transferred from a mother to her developing fetus are called
a. schemas.
b. attachments.
c. teratogens.
d. zygotes.
e. menarche.
____
6. When pregnant rats drink alcohol, their young offspring later display a(n)
a. immunity to fetal alcohol syndrome.
b. aversion to the taste of alcohol.
c. unusually rapid development of bladder control.
d. liking for the odor of alcohol.
e. less severe reactions to controlled substances.
____
7. 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.
____
8. 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.
____
9. Research on the perceptual abilities of newborns indicates that they
a. see nothing for the first 12 hours.
b. see only differences in brightness.
c. recognize the outlines of objects but none of the details.
d. look more at a facelike image than at a bull's-eye pattern.
e. have very good visual acuity.
____ 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. Excess neural connections in the brain's association areas are reduced through a process of
a. accommodation.
b. imprinting.
c. attachment.
d. pruning.
e. assimilation.
____ 12. Maturation is to education as ________ is to ________.
a. accommodation; assimilation
b. learning; experience
c. nature; nurture
d. imprinting; critical period
e. environment; learning
____ 13. Three-year-olds who experienced a fire evacuation caused by a burning popcorn maker were unable
to remember the cause of this vivid event when they were 10-year-olds. This best illustrates
a. habituation.
b. assimilation.
c. infantile amnesia.
d. crystallized intelligence.
e. fluid intelligence.
____ 14. Poor memory for early life experiences results from a baby's relative lack of
a. secure attachment.
b. maturation.
c. egocentrism.
d. stranger anxiety.
e. schema.
____ 15. When tethered to a mobile, infants learned the association between
a. looking and the mobile's smell.
b. rooting and the mobile's sound.
c. swallowing and the mobile's color.
d. kicking and the mobile's movement.
e. crying and the mobile's pattern.
____ 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. Four-year-old Karen can't remember anything of the first few months of her life. This is best
explained by the fact that
a. the trauma of birth interfered with the subsequent formation of memories.
b. most brain cells do not yet exist at the time of birth.
c. experiences shortly after birth are a meaningless blur of darkness and light.
d. she lacked language skills for organizing her early life experiences.
e. babies lack the hippocampus in the brain needed for memory development.
____ 18. Jean Piaget studied how children develop their abilities to think, know, and remember. Together,
these abilities are called
a. maturation.
b. temperament.
c. cognition.
d. identity.
e. attachment.
____ 19. Piaget is best known for his interest in the process of ________ development.
a. motor
b. social
c. cognitive
d. emotional
e. physical
____ 20. According to Piaget, schemas are
a.
b.
c.
d.
fixed sequences of cognitive developmental stages.
children's ways of coming to terms with their sexuality.
people's conceptual frameworks for understanding their experiences.
problem-solving strategies that are typically not developed until the formal
operational stage.
e. moral ideas children use to understand right and wrong.
____ 21. The first time that 4-year-old Sarah saw her older brother play a flute, she thought it was simply a
large whistle. Sarah's initial understanding of the flute best illustrates the process of
a. assimilation.
b. egocentrism.
c. conservation.
d. accommodation.
e. maturation.
____ 22. In recognizing the inaccuracies of one's own ethnic stereotypes and revising his or her beliefs, an
individual most clearly illustrates the process of
a. habituation.
b. attachment.
c. assimilation.
d. imprinting.
e. accommodation.
____ 23. Piaget claimed that children understand the world primarily by observing the effects of their own
actions on other people, objects, and events during the ________ stage.
a. concrete operational
b. sensorimotor
c. formal operational
d. preoperational
e. preconventional
____ 24. 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
____ 25. Five-year-old Tammy mistakenly believes that her short, wide glass contains less soda than her
brother's tall, narrow glass. Actually, both glasses contain the same amount of soda. This illustrates
that Tammy lacks the concept of
a. conservation.
b. egocentrism.
c. assimilation.
d. object permanence.
e. accommodation.
____ 26. Children, even more than teens and adults, are likely to assume that something will be clear to others
if it is clear to them. This curse of knowledge illustrates
a. assimilation.
b. egocentrism.
c. imprinting.
d. habituation.
e. accommodation.
____ 27. Psychologists David Premack and Guy Woodruff described chimpanzees' seeming ability to read
intentions as indicative of
a. imprinting.
b. a theory of mind.
c. object permanence.
d. crystallized intelligence.
e. conservation.
____ 28. According to Piaget, children acquire the mental operations needed to comprehend such things as
mathematical transformations and conservation during the ________ stage.
a. preoperational
b. sensorimotor
c. concrete operational
d. formal operational
e. preconventional
____ 29. The acquisition of a sense of object permanence is most closely associated with the development of
a. conservation.
b. concrete operational intelligence.
c. stranger anxiety.
d. self-awareness.
e. egocentrism.
____ 30. Eighteen-month-old Justin follows his mother around the house, clinging tightly to her when he is
frightened. This best illustrates
a. object permanence.
b. attachment behavior.
c. stranger anxiety.
d. the rooting reflex.
e. habituation.
____ 31. 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.
____ 32. Infant monkeys raised with a nourishing wire mother and a nonnourishing cloth mother
a.
b.
c.
d.
preferred the nourishing wire mother.
preferred the nonnourishing cloth mother.
showed no preference for one mother over the other.
shifted their initial preference for the wire mother to the cloth mother as they
matured.
e. did not become attached to either mother.
____ 33. The process of imprinting involves the formation of a(n)
a. attachment.
b. identity.
c. theory of mind.
d. primary sex characteristic.
e. self-concept.
____ 34. Which of the following is an example of imprinting?
a. A 2-year-old poodle approaches a stranger who calls it.
b. A 4-year-old boy imitates aggression he sees on television.
c. A duckling demonstrates attachment to a bouncing ball.
d. A 3-year-old girl is simultaneously learning two different languages.
e. A 2-week-old infant sleeps through the night for the first time.
____ 35. Some mothers feed their infants when they show signs of hunger, whereas others fail to respond
predictably to their infants' demands for food. These different maternal feeding practices are most
likely to contribute to differences in infant
a. habituation.
b. attachment.
c. conservation.
d. maturation.
e. egocentrism.
____ 36. 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.
____ 37. Marlys is a sensitive, responsive parent who consistently satisfies the needs of Sara, her infant
daughter. According to Erikson, Sara is likely to
a. form a lifelong attitude of basic trust toward the world.
b. encounter some difficulty in overcoming the limitation of egocentrism.
c. encounter some difficulty in forming an attachment to her father.
d. achieve formal operational intelligence more quickly than the average child.
e. change schema frequently to accommodate new situations.
____ 38. Many researchers believe that adult styles of romantic love correspond with childhood patterns of
a. habituation.
b. attachment.
c. conservation.
d. object permanence.
e. accommodation.
____ 39. Securely attached people exhibit less
a. habituation.
b. object permanence.
c. authoritative parenting.
d. fear of failure.
e. gender typing.
____ 40. Pat is normally very restless and fidgety, whereas Shelley is usually quiet and easygoing. The two
children most clearly differ in
a. intelligence.
b. gender schemas.
c. temperament.
d. physical health.
e. introversion level.
____ 41. 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.
____ 42. Those who inappropriately attribute children's troubling personality traits to inadequate parental
nurture should be reminded of the importance of
a. gender identity.
b. genetic predispositions.
c. imprinting.
d. the X chromosome.
e. attachment.
____ 43. Already at 15 months of age, Justin strongly senses that he can rely on his father to comfort and
protect him. This most clearly contributes to
a. egocentrism.
b. conservation.
c. object permanence.
d. habituation.
e. basic trust.
____ 44. Research indicates that most abusive parents report that they themselves were
a. raised in a permissive and overindulgent environment.
b. raised by authoritative parents.
c. prevented from interacting with childhood peers.
d. battered or neglected as children.
e. ignored by their fathers during the critical period.
____ 45. Severe and prolonged child sexual abuse places children at risk for
a. fetal alcohol syndrome.
b. menarche.
c. imprinting.
d. substance abuse.
e. gender typing.
____ 46. Foster care that moves a young child through a series of foster families is most likely to result in the
disruption of
a. the rooting reflex.
b. habituation.
c. attachment.
d. object permanence.
e. assimilation.
____ 47. Combined data from 88 studies indicate that there are no differences in the self-esteem scores of
children who are
a. adoptees rather than nonadoptees.
b. securely rather than insecurely attached.
c. raised by authoritative rather than by authoritarian parents.
d. in their early rather than their late teens.
e. imprinted on grandparents rather than on biological parents.
____ 48. In formulating his theory of psychosocial development, Erikson would have suggested that
authoritarian parents are likely to inhibit young children's
a. theory of mind.
b. autonomy and initiative.
c. assimilation and accommodation.
d. conventional morality.
e. habituation.
____ 49. 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
____ 50. Authoritative parents are likely to have children who
a. are obedient but have low self-esteem.
b. have high self-esteem and are self-reliant.
c. have high self-esteem but are somewhat dependent.
d. are rebellious and have low self-esteem.
e. have low self-concept but are egocentric.
____ 51. The Albertsons establish and enforce rules for their children to follow. They give reasons for the
rules and invite their teenagers to join in the discussion when new rules are being made.
Psychologists would characterize the Albertsons as ________ parents.
a. authoritarian
b. legalistic
c. authoritative
d. permissive
e. conventional
____ 52. 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.
____ 53. Gender differences in physical aggression are greatest in cultures characterized by
a. individualism.
b. the pruning process.
c. gender inequality.
d. extraversion.
e. egocentrism.
____ 54. Compared with men, women are more likely to talk with others to
a. communicate solutions.
b. explore relationships.
c. demonstrate leadership skills.
d. express their unique opinions.
e. assert social superiority.
____ 55. Female children are most likely to act like tomboys if they were exposed to excess ________ during
their prenatal development.
a. DNA
b. testosterone
c. endorphins
d. estrogen
e. chromosomes
____ 56. Prenatal testosterone secretions exert one of their earliest influences on
a. genes.
b. teratogens.
c. gender schemas.
d. brain organization.
e. menarche.
____ 57. Gender role refers to
a. one's biological sex.
b.
c.
d.
e.
a sense of being male or female.
a set of expected behaviors for males and females.
a sense of being homosexual or heterosexual.
how masculine a boy is or how feminine a girl is.
____ 58. The social roles assigned to women and men
a. are virtually the same in all cultures.
b. have been virtually the same in all historical time periods.
c. differ widely across cultures.
d. differ widely across historical time periods but not across cultures.
e. are based on evolutionary and genetic strengths.
____ 59. When his mother offered to play leapfrog with him, Jorge protested, “I'm not going to play a girl's
game!” Jorge's reaction best illustrates the impact of
a. preoperational reasoning.
b. gender schemas.
c. the pruning process.
d. permissive parenting.
e. temperament.
____ 60. A stimulating environment is most likely to facilitate the development of a child's
a. individualism.
b. genome.
c. temperament.
d. gender typing.
e. neural connections.
____ 61. Parents should not take too much blame for the failures and shortcomings of their children because
a. their child-rearing mistakes simply reflect that they were not properly raised by
their own parents.
b. children typically fail on purpose in order to establish a healthy independence from
parents.
c. child-rearing practices have little effect on children's beliefs and values.
d. parental behavior is only one of many factors that influence children's behavior.
e. the resulting guilt has an even more negative impact on their parenting skills.
____ 62. The remarkable academic and vocational successes of the children of refugee “boat people” from
Vietnam and Cambodia best illustrate the importance of
a. individualism.
b. temperament.
c. family environment.
d. personal space.
e. predisposition.
____ 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. A male's first ejaculation
a. almost always produces feelings of guilt.
b. typically facilitates habituation.
c. usually occurs as a nocturnal emission.
d. signifies a physical readiness to father children.
e. occurs during the sensorimotor stage.
____ 66. “If you're really concerned about the rights and dignity of women,” Yigal asked his older brother,
“how can you justify buying pornographic magazines?” Yigal's question indicates that he is in the
________ stage of development.
a. formal operational
b. conventional
c. preconventional
d. concrete operational
e. preoperational
____ 67. According to Kohlberg, morality based on a desire to uphold the laws of society is characteristic of
the ________ stage.
a. preconventional
b. preoperational
c. conventional
d. postconventional
e. operational
____ 68. 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
____ 69. Formal operational thought is MOST necessary for the development of ________ morality.
a. preoperational
b. conventional
c. preconventional
d. postconventional
e. operational
____ 70. Haidt's social intuitionist account highlights the impact of automatic gut-level feelings on
a. attachment.
b. habituation.
c. egocentrism.
d. moral judgments.
e. stranger anxiety.
____ 71. Killing one person in order to save five by throwing a switch that diverts a runaway trolley is judged
as more morally acceptable than killing one person in order to save five by pushing a stranger
directly into the path of the oncoming trolley. This best illustrates that moral judgments may reflect
a. fluid intelligence.
b. gut-level intuitions.
c. stranger anxiety.
d. formal operational thought.
e. critical period.
____ 72. Through service learning programs, teens tutor, clean up neighborhoods, and assist older people. As
a result, their sense of competence increases. This demonstrates that
a. moral talk results in moral action.
b. moral action feeds moral attitudes.
c. postconventional morality is not simply a Western phenomenon.
d. nature and nurture interact.
e. conventional morality may precede preconventional morality.
____ 73. Sixteen-year-old Brenda questions her parents' values but does not fully accept her friends' standards
either. Her confusion about what she really wants and values in life suggests that Brenda is
struggling with the problem of
a. autonomy.
b. identity.
c. initiative.
d. integrity.
e. competence.
____ 74. According to Erikson, committing oneself to meaningful social roles would be most indicative of the
achievement of
a. integrity.
b. autonomy.
c. competence.
d. initiative.
e. identity.
____ 75. Adolescents and their parents are most likely to have disagreements regarding
a. religious beliefs.
b. career choices.
c. college choices.
d. homework.
e. political beliefs.
____ 76. A developmental stage between adolescent dependence and responsible adulthood is called
a. puberty.
b. maturation.
c. emerging adulthood.
d. postconventional morality.
e. formal operations.
____ 77. Research on older adults has shown that
a. they grow increasingly fearful of death.
b. they become increasingly prone to car accidents.
c. most eventually develop dementia.
d. they experience less life satisfaction than younger adults.
e. they become more susceptible to short-term illnesses.
____ 78. Menopause is associated with a reduction in
a. adrenaline.
b. testosterone.
c. estrogen.
d. acetylcholine.
e. dopamine.
____ 79. 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.
____ 80. 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.
____ 81. Older people are NOT increasingly susceptible to
a. pneumonia.
b. Parkinson's disease.
c. common cold viruses.
d. dementia.
e. Alzheimer's disease.
____ 82. An irreversible brain disorder marked by a deterioration of one's normal reasoning and memory
skills is called
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
menarche.
autism.
infantile amnesia.
Alzheimer's disease.
critical period.
____ 83. Alzheimer's disease involves a deterioration of neurons that produce
a. dopamine.
b. telomeres.
c. acetylcholine.
d. epinephrine.
e. teratogens.
____ 84. When adults of varying ages were tested for their memory of a recently learned list of 24 words, the
older adults demonstrated
a. no decline in either encoding or recognition.
b. a decline in recognition but not in recall.
c. a decline in recall but not in recognition.
d. a decline in both recognition and recall.
e. no decline in either recall or encoding.
____ 85. Cross-sectional research indicated that during early and middle adulthood, aging is associated with
________ levels of intelligence. Longitudinal research indicated that during this period of life, aging
is associated with ________ levels of intelligence.
a. increasing; declining
b. declining; stable
c. increasing; increasing
d. stable; declining
e. stable; stable
____ 86. Tonya asks people of different ages to complete a measure of life satisfaction. She then looks for life
satisfaction differences across different age levels. Tonya is conducting a ________ study.
a. longitudinal
b. preoperational
c. cross-sectional
d. concrete operational
e. naturalistic
____ 87. 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
____ 88. Formal operational thought is most similar to
a. fluid intelligence.
b. generativity.
c. conventional morality.
d. autonomy.
e. crystallized intelligence.
____ 89. The terminal decline phenomenon involves a decrease in mental ability that accompanies the
approach of
a. menopause.
b. retirement.
c. death.
d. any critical period.
e. menarche.
____ 90. Level of emotional instability is
a. highest among 30-year-olds.
b. highest among 40-year-olds.
c. highest among 50-year-olds.
d. highest among 55-year-olds.
e. similar among adults at all of these ages.
____ 91. Adults are ________ likely to divorce in their early forties than in their early twenties. They are
________ likely to commit suicide in their early forties than in their early seventies.
a. less; less
b. equally; more
c. less; equally
d. more; less
e. more; more
____ 92. Professor Parker suggested that heterosexual adults are genetically predisposed to form
monogamous bonds because this practice facilitated the cooperative nurture and survival of children.
The professor's suggestion best illustrates a(n) ________ perspective.
a. authoritarian
b. postconventional
c. psychosocial
d. evolutionary
e. humanistic
____ 93. The best predictor of a couple's marital satisfaction is the
a. frequency of their sexual intimacy.
b. intensity of their passionate feelings.
c. ratio of their positive to negative interactions with each other.
d. experience or nonexperience of a prior marriage.
e. high level of attachment between the partners.
____ 94. Research on people's feelings of satisfaction with their lives indicates that
a. adolescents report being slightly happier than people over 65 years of age.
b. people over 65 years of age report being slightly happier than adolescents.
c. middle-aged adults report being slightly happier than both adolescents and people
over 65 years of age.
d. young and older adults report being slightly happier than middle-aged adults.
e. young adults report greater mood swings, alternating between happiness and
depression.
____ 95. During the time following the death of a loved one
a. those who express the strongest grief immediately do not purge their grief more
quickly.
b. those who talk frequently with others are unusually likely to prolong their own
feelings of depression.
c. grieving men are at less risk for ill health than are grieving women.
d. both men and women go through predictable stages of denial followed by anger.
e. those who express the strongest grief purge the sadness more quickly and recover
faster.
____ 96. According to Erikson, adolescence is to identity as late adulthood is to
a. integrity.
b. autonomy.
c. generativity.
d. intimacy.
e. trust.
____ 97. In Erikson's theory, the sense of integrity achieved in late adulthood refers to the feeling that
a. one's life has been meaningful.
b. one is healthy and not dependent upon others.
c. one is acting ethically.
d. one's life is full of close friendships.
e. one can trust the others in their life to care for them.
____ 98. Ross believes that personality development is a matter of sudden qualitative changes at various
turning points in the life span. His viewpoint is most directly relevant to the issue of
a. imprinting or object permanence.
b. nature or nurture.
c. assimilation or accommodation.
d. continuity or stages.
e. schema or habituation.
____ 99. The stability of personality traits is greater among
a. boys than among girls.
b. men than among women.
c. adults than among children.
d. preschoolers than among adolescents.
e. securely attached than insecurely attached children.
____ 100. A belief that adult personality is completely determined in the early childhood years would be most
relevant to the issue of
a. continuity or stages.
b. stability or change.
c. fluid or crystallized intelligence.
d. conventional or postconventional morality.
e. cross-sectional or longitudinal studies.
Unit 9 Practice Test C
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.
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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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ANS:
B
E
D
D
C
A
B
D
B
C
B
C
B
B
D
C
C
B
E
D
C
B
D
C
A
C
A
D
D
B
B
B
E
D
C
B
C
C
B
C
D
C
C
B
C
D
A
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
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Difficult
Medium
Easy
Easy
Easy
Medium
Medium
Easy
Medium
Medium
Medium
Easy
Medium
Easy
Medium
Easy
Easy
Difficult
Easy
Difficult
Difficult
Easy
Medium
Easy
Difficult
Medium
Medium
Medium
Medium
Medium
Medium
Medium
Medium
Easy
Easy
Difficult
Easy
Easy
Medium
Medium
Easy
Easy
Medium
Medium
Medium
Easy
Difficult
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89.
90.
91.
92.
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94.
95.
96.
97.
98.
99.
100.
ANS:
ANS:
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C
E
A
D
C
D
A
A
A
D
C
B
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
DIF:
Easy
Medium
Difficult
Easy
Easy
Easy
Medium
Difficult
Medium
Medium
Medium
Medium
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