Showing posts with label Free and Printable TOEFL test Sample Questions with answers (Other Eng. Exams). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Free and Printable TOEFL test Sample Questions with answers (Other Eng. Exams). Show all posts

Friday, May 9, 2014

Free and Printable TOEFL test Sample Questions with answers (Other Eng. Exams)

Free and New TOEFL test Sample Questions for 2014


This is new article on Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions for 2014. In this part you will see questions related completing the sentences. These questions can be practice for other English related Practice Exams too.



Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions: Q 1-10


Free and Printable TOEFL test Sample Questions with answers (Other Eng. Exams)



Choose the appropriate options to complete the sentences




Q 1

The journey......meticulously, because we...... through uninhabited regions where there was to be no food or water available.



A) should be planned / had passed

B) ought to plan / must have passed

C) must have been planned / will pass

D) had to be planned / would pass

E) may be planned / should have passed



Q 2

Since Ted has......a good education ......a charismatic personality, he should have a bright future.



A) whether / or

B) even / so

C) not only / but also

D) such / as

E) neither / and


Free and Printable TOEFL test Sample Questions with answers (Other Eng. Exams)



Q 3

.......I know, Jake is ...... interested in our project.



A) As though / even

B) Whoever / anymore

C) No matter / still

D) Even so / no more

E) As far as / no longer

Free and Printable TOEFL test Sample Questions with answers (Other Eng. Exams)


Q 4

It is......fun to take photographs on a digital camera because you can see them right away.



A) much more

B) too much

C) so many

D) several

E) such a lot



Q 5

Steve WIcCurry, many of ...... photographs have won international awards, recently had an exhibition in Istanbul.



A) which

B) whom

C) what

D) whose

E) that



Q 6

Some people have a talent for science and mathematics,......others are good at art and music.



A) such as

B) rather than

C) while

D) no matter

E) otherwise



Q 7

US visa fees are very high, and so, ......, most countries charge US citizens a lot for a visa.



A) no matter

B) owing to

C) in addition

D) as if

E) In return



Q 8

I wonder......textbooks I will need to buy for my literature course.



A) how many

B) how often

C) how far

D) however

E) how much



Q 9

You wouldn't be studying mechanical engineering if your father had not forced you to, .......?



A) would you

B) wouldn't you

C) had he

D) are you

E) hadn't he



Q 10

Protesters attempting to reform the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund have not had much success ...... .



A) just

B) even

C) so far

D) later

E) rather



Answers Key-Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions: Q 1-10




1. D

2. C

3. E

4. A

5. D

6. C

7. E

8. A

9. A

10. C

Monday, September 23, 2013

Free and Printable TOEFL test Sample Questions with answers (Other Eng. Exams)

Free and New TOFEL Practice Test Sample Questions 2013-14



This is 18th part blog on Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions for 2013. In this part you will see questions related finding answers options to complete the sentences. These questions can be practice for other English related Practice Exams too.




Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions: Q 161-170




Choose the appropriate options to complete the sentences




Q 161


The man denied all responsibility for the rumors ---- for some time.



A) to be circulating

B) have circulated

C) to being circulated

D) having been circulating

E) be circulated



Q 162

We think the project, ---- relies on everyone making an effort, will be successful.



A) what

B) that

C) for which

D) which

E) where



Q 163

He showed me round the town, ---- was very kind of him.



A) where

B) that

C) who

D) what

E) which



Q 164

Fraud detectives are investigating the company, three of ---- senior executives have already been arrested.



A) which

B) that

C) whose

D) what

E) whom



Q 165

I intentionally didn't have lunch ---- I would be hungry tonight.



A) so that

B) in case

C) hence

D) however

E) moreover



Q 166

We were unable to get funding and ---- had to abandon the project.



A) therefore

B) notwithstanding

C) however

D) since

E) providing



Q 167

You mustn't think that you can borrow it whenever you want to just ---- I'm lending you my dress for tonight.



A) due to

B) despite

C) yet

D) because

E) in case of



Q 168

She has denied her family and refused to have any contact with them, ----?



A) hasn't she

B) isn't it

C) doesn't she

D) did she

E) wasn't it



Q 169

When she ---- to boarding school, she felt as though her parents ---- her.



A) has been sent / have rejected

B) sent / had rejected

C) sent / rejected

D) was sent / had rejected

E) had been sent / have rejected





Q 170

By the time I ---- the job advertised, it ---- too late to apply.



A) see / has been

B) had seen / has been

C) have seen / was

D)would see / had been

E) saw/ was



Answers-Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions: Q 161-170




161. D

162. D

163. E

164. C

165. A

166. A

167. D

168. A

169. D

170. E

Monday, September 9, 2013

Free and Printable TOEFL test Sample Questions with answers (Other Eng. Exams)

Free and New TOEFL test Sample Questions with answers

 



This is 17th part blog on Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions for 2013. In this part you will see questions related finding answers in Paragraph. These questions can be practice for other English related Practice Exams too.



Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions: Q 158-160


 

Read the paragraph and anwers the question:


Q 158

There have been many famous political firsts in the history of the United States. Jeannette Pickering Rankin is no exception. She was the first woman elected to the United States Congress in 1917. Interestingly, she was a member of Congress before the U.S. Constitutional Amendment XIX granting women the right to vote was ratified.



Jeannette Rankin was born near Missoula, Montana on June 11, 1880. Her father was a rancher and her mother was a schoolteacher. Jeannette was their first child. She attended public schools in Montana, and graduated from the University of Montana at Missoula in 1902 with a Bachelor of Science degree in biology. She began promoting the women’s suffrage movement - an effort to secure women’s voting rights - in 1910.



After working for the New York Women Suffrage Party and the American Woman Suffrage Association, Jeannette Rankin returned to Montana. She continued her working on women’s suffrage through speaking engagements and organization efforts. Rankins involvement helped Montanan women gain the right to vote in 1914.



Rankin decided to run as a Republican for the United States House of Representatives in 1916. Her brother a prominent businessman supported her financially. Some people thought that her campaign would sour the fight for women’s voting rights. Her victory on August 29, 2016 sealed her place in history; she became the first women elected to U.S. Congress.



Jeannette Rankin was officially sworn in as a member of 65th Congress on April 2, 1917. One of her first votes was against declaring war on Germany, which marked the United States’s entry into World War I. She continued supporting women’s suffrage, and she is appointed to a committee formed to examine the issue. In 1918, she opened debate in the U.S. House of Representatives on a resolution to grant women the right to vote. It was the precursor to the eventual constitutional amendment ratified two years later.



Rankin did not run for reelection to the U.S. House of Representatives. Instead, she sought election to the United States Senate. Her bid was very unsuccessful. She left Montana and moved to Georgia, where she purchased a farm. Despite the move, she maintained her status as a Montana resident. More than 20 years after her first term in Congress, Rankin won the 1940 election for the 77th Congress as a Montana Representative. In her second term she was an outspoken opponent of World War II. After leaving Congress in 1943, she continued to advocate for women’s rights and world peace until her death in 1973.



How old was Jeannette Rankin when she died?

A. 93

B. 71

C. 60

D. 52





Q 159

There have been many famous political firsts in the history of the United States. Jeannette Pickering Rankin is no exception. She was the first woman elected to the United States Congress in 1917. Interestingly, she was a member of Congress before the U.S. Constitutional Amendment XIX granting women the right to vote was ratified.



Jeannette Rankin was born near Missoula, Montana on June 11, 1880. Her father was a rancher and her mother was a schoolteacher. Jeannette was their first child. She attended public schools in Montana, and graduated from the University of Montana at Missoula in 1902 with a Bachelor of Science degree in biology. She began promoting the women’s suffrage movement - an effort to secure women’s voting rights - in 1910.



After working for the New York Women Suffrage Party and the American Woman Suffrage Association, Jeannette Rankin returned to Montana. She continued her working on women’s suffrage through speaking engagements and organization efforts. Rankins involvement helped Montanan women gain the right to vote in 1914.



Rankin decided to run as a Republican for the United States House of Representatives in 1916. Her brother a prominent businessman supported her financially. Some people thought that her campaign would sour the fight for women’s voting rights. Her victory on August 29, 2016 sealed her place in history; she became the first women elected to U.S. Congress.



Jeannette Rankin was officially sworn in as a member of 65th Congress on April 2, 1917. One of her first votes was against declaring war on Germany, which marked the United States’s entry into World War I. She continued supporting women’s suffrage, and she is appointed to a committee formed to examine the issue. In 1918, she opened debate in the U.S. House of Representatives on a resolution to grant women the right to vote. It was the precursor to the eventual constitutional amendment ratified two years later.



Rankin did not run for reelection to the U.S. House of Representatives. Instead, she sought election to the United States Senate. Her bid was very unsuccessful. She left Montana and moved to Georgia, where she purchased a farm. Despite the move, she maintained her status as a Montana resident. More than 20 years after her first term in Congress, Rankin won the 1940 election for the 77th Congress as a Montana Representative. In her second term she was an outspoken opponent of World War II. After leaving Congress in 1943, she continued to advocate for women’s rights and world peace until her death in 1973.



Which is a reasonable inference one can draw about Jeannette Rankin?

A. Rankin moved to Georgia after losing her Senate bid because she was too embarrassed to return to Montana.

B. Rankin ran for Congress in 1917 to further her fight for women’s rights.

C. Rankin could not have been as successful without the help of her brother.

D. Ranking waited 20 years to run for Congress again because it is expensive to do so.



Q 160



There have been many famous political firsts in the history of the United States. Jeannette Pickering Rankin is no exception. She was the first woman elected to the United States Congress in 1917. Interestingly, she was a member of Congress before the U.S. Constitutional Amendment XIX granting women the right to vote was ratified.



Jeannette Rankin was born near Missoula, Montana on June 11, 1880. Her father was a rancher and her mother was a schoolteacher. Jeannette was their first child. She attended public schools in Montana, and graduated from the University of Montana at Missoula in 1902 with a Bachelor of Science degree in biology. She began promoting the women’s suffrage movement - an effort to secure women’s voting rights - in 1910.



After working for the New York Women Suffrage Party and the American Woman Suffrage Association, Jeannette Rankin returned to Montana. She continued her working on women’s suffrage through speaking engagements and organization efforts. Rankins involvement helped Montanan women gain the right to vote in 1914.



Rankin decided to run as a Republican for the United States House of Representatives in 1916. Her brother a prominent businessman supported her financially. Some people thought that her campaign would sour the fight for women’s voting rights. Her victory on August 29, 2016 sealed her place in history; she became the first women elected to U.S. Congress.



Jeannette Rankin was officially sworn in as a member of 65th Congress on April 2, 1917. One of her first votes was against declaring war on Germany, which marked the United States’s entry into World War I. She continued supporting women’s suffrage, and she is appointed to a committee formed to examine the issue. In 1918, she opened debate in the U.S. House of Representatives on a resolution to grant women the right to vote. It was the precursor to the eventual constitutional amendment ratified two years later.



Rankin did not run for reelection to the U.S. House of Representatives. Instead, she sought election to the United States Senate. Her bid was very unsuccessful. She left Montana and moved to Georgia, where she purchased a farm. Despite the move, she maintained her status as a Montana resident. More than 20 years after her first term in Congress, Rankin won the 1940 election for the 77th Congress as a Montana Representative. In her second term she was an outspoken opponent of World War II. After leaving Congress in 1943, she continued to advocate for women’s rights and world peace until her death in 1973.



Why was Rankin likely appointed to the Congressional Committee to examine the XIXth Amendment?

A. Because she was the only woman in Congress.

B. Because she was one of the newest members of Congress.

C. Because she had a long history of supporting women’s rights.

D. Because she voted against declaring war on Germany at the start of WWI



Answers-Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions: Q 158-160



    158

Answer [A]: She was 93 years old at the time of her death. Jeannette Rankin was born in 1880 and died in 1973.



159

Answer [B]: One can reasonably infer that Rankin ran for Congress in 1917 to further her fight for women’s rights. Prior to running for office, Rankin had dedicated herself to women’s suffrage. She worked for the New York Women’s Suffrage Party and the American Women’s Suffrage Association. She lectured and promoted the movement.

160

Answer [C]: Rankin was likely appointed to the Congressional committee to examine a resolution to grant women the right to vote because she continued to support women’s rights even as she served in Congress. Although she did vote against declaring war on Germany, there is no likely connection between that vote and her appointment. It was true that she was one of the newest members of Congress at the time, but her length of service did not likely play a role in determining her appointment to the committee.

 

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Free and Printable TOEFL test Sample Questions with answers (Other Eng. Exams)

Free and New TOEFL test Sample Questions with answers



This is 16th part blog on Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions for 2013. In this part you will see questions related completing the sentences. These questions can be practice for other English related Practice Exams too.




Good luck to all....



Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions: Q 154-157



Read and answer the questions

 

Q 154


There have been many famous political firsts in the history of the United States. Jeannette Pickering Rankin is no exception. She was the first woman elected to the United States Congress in 1917. Interestingly, she was a member of Congress before the U.S. Constitutional Amendment XIX granting women the right to vote was ratified.



Jeannette Rankin was born near Missoula, Montana on June 11, 1880. Her father was a rancher and her mother was a schoolteacher. Jeannette was their first child. She attended public schools in Montana, and graduated from the University of Montana at Missoula in 1902 with a Bachelor of Science degree in biology. She began promoting the women’s suffrage movement - an effort to secure women’s voting rights - in 1910.



After working for the New York Women Suffrage Party and the American Woman Suffrage Association, Jeannette Rankin returned to Montana. She continued her working on women’s suffrage through speaking engagements and organization efforts. Rankins involvement helped Montanan women gain the right to vote in 1914.



Rankin decided to run as a Republican for the United States House of Representatives in 1916. Her brother a prominent businessman supported her financially. Some people thought that her campaign would sour the fight for women’s voting rights. Her victory on August 29, 2016 sealed her place in history; she became the first women elected to U.S. Congress.



Jeannette Rankin was officially sworn in as a member of 65th Congress on April 2, 1917. One of her first votes was against declaring war on Germany, which marked the United States’s entry into World War I. She continued supporting women’s suffrage, and she is appointed to a committee formed to examine the issue. In 1918, she opened debate in the U.S. House of Representatives on a resolution to grant women the right to vote. It was the precursor to the eventual constitutional amendment ratified two years later.



Rankin did not run for reelection to the U.S. House of Representatives. Instead, she sought election to the United States Senate. Her bid was very unsuccessful. She left Montana and moved to Georgia, where she purchased a farm. Despite the move, she maintained her status as a Montana resident. More than 20 years after her first term in Congress, Rankin won the 1940 election for the 77th Congress as a Montana Representative. In her second term she was an outspoken opponent of World War II. After leaving Congress in 1943, she continued to advocate for women’s rights and world peace until her death in 1973.





What is the main idea of this passage?

A. Jeanette Rankin, the first woman elected to Congress, was an advocate for women’s suffrage.

B. Jeanette Rankin won a seat in the United States Senate, but lost the election to become a senator.

C. Jeannette Rankin helped women in Montana win the right to vote in 1914.

D. Jeannette Rankin served in the U.S. Congress for two terms, twenty years apart.



Q 155

There have been many famous political firsts in the history of the United States. Jeannette Pickering Rankin is no exception. She was the first woman elected to the United States Congress in 1917. Interestingly, she was a member of Congress before the U.S. Constitutional Amendment XIX granting women the right to vote was ratified.



Jeannette Rankin was born near Missoula, Montana on June 11, 1880. Her father was a rancher and her mother was a schoolteacher. Jeannette was their first child. She attended public schools in Montana, and graduated from the University of Montana at Missoula in 1902 with a Bachelor of Science degree in biology. She began promoting the women’s suffrage movement - an effort to secure women’s voting rights - in 1910.



After working for the New York Women Suffrage Party and the American Woman Suffrage Association, Jeannette Rankin returned to Montana. She continued her working on women’s suffrage through speaking engagements and organization efforts. Rankins involvement helped Montanan women gain the right to vote in 1914.



Rankin decided to run as a Republican for the United States House of Representatives in 1916. Her brother a prominent businessman supported her financially. Some people thought that her campaign would sour the fight for women’s voting rights. Her victory on August 29, 2016 sealed her place in history; she became the first women elected to U.S. Congress.



Jeannette Rankin was officially sworn in as a member of 65th Congress on April 2, 1917. One of her first votes was against declaring war on Germany, which marked the United States’s entry into World War I. She continued supporting women’s suffrage, and she is appointed to a committee formed to examine the issue. In 1918, she opened debate in the U.S. House of Representatives on a resolution to grant women the right to vote. It was the precursor to the eventual constitutional amendment ratified two years later.



Rankin did not run for reelection to the U.S. House of Representatives. Instead, she sought election to the United States Senate. Her bid was very unsuccessful. She left Montana and moved to Georgia, where she purchased a farm. Despite the move, she maintained her status as a Montana resident. More than 20 years after her first term in Congress, Rankin won the 1940 election for the 77th Congress as a Montana Representative. In her second term she was an outspoken opponent of World War II. After leaving Congress in 1943, she continued to advocate for women’s rights and world peace until her death in 1973.



Why did some women’s rights supporters not support Jeannette Rankin’s run for Congress in 1916?

A. Most of her supporters were women and they could not vote.

B. Many felt her run for office might have a negative influence on the fight for women’s voting rights.

C. Her brother ran her campaign.

D. She had previously run for Senate and lost that election.





Q 156

There have been many famous political firsts in the history of the United States. Jeannette Pickering Rankin is no exception. She was the first woman elected to the United States Congress in 1917. Interestingly, she was a member of Congress before the U.S. Constitutional Amendment XIX granting women the right to vote was ratified.



Jeannette Rankin was born near Missoula, Montana on June 11, 1880. Her father was a rancher and her mother was a schoolteacher. Jeannette was their first child. She attended public schools in Montana, and graduated from the University of Montana at Missoula in 1902 with a Bachelor of Science degree in biology. She began promoting the women’s suffrage movement - an effort to secure women’s voting rights - in 1910.



After working for the New York Women Suffrage Party and the American Woman Suffrage Association, Jeannette Rankin returned to Montana. She continued her working on women’s suffrage through speaking engagements and organization efforts. Rankins involvement helped Montanan women gain the right to vote in 1914.



Rankin decided to run as a Republican for the United States House of Representatives in 1916. Her brother a prominent businessman supported her financially. Some people thought that her campaign would sour the fight for women’s voting rights. Her victory on August 29, 2016 sealed her place in history; she became the first women elected to U.S. Congress.



Jeannette Rankin was officially sworn in as a member of 65th Congress on April 2, 1917. One of her first votes was against declaring war on Germany, which marked the United States’s entry into World War I. She continued supporting women’s suffrage, and she is appointed to a committee formed to examine the issue. In 1918, she opened debate in the U.S. House of Representatives on a resolution to grant women the right to vote. It was the precursor to the eventual constitutional amendment ratified two years later.



Rankin did not run for reelection to the U.S. House of Representatives. Instead, she sought election to the United States Senate. Her bid was very unsuccessful. She left Montana and moved to Georgia, where she purchased a farm. Despite the move, she maintained her status as a Montana resident. More than 20 years after her first term in Congress, Rankin won the 1940 election for the 77th Congress as a Montana Representative. In her second term she was an outspoken opponent of World War II. After leaving Congress in 1943, she continued to advocate for women’s rights and world peace until her death in 1973.



Why didn’t Rankin run for a second term in Congress immediately following her first term?

A. She had moved from Montana and was no longer eligible to run.

B. Women’s voting rights had been ratified and she felt her work was done.

C. She wanted to go back to teaching in Montana.

D. She ran, instead, for a seat in the senate.



Q 157

There have been many famous political firsts in the history of the United States. Jeannette Pickering Rankin is no exception. She was the first woman elected to the United States Congress in 1917. Interestingly, she was a member of Congress before the U.S. Constitutional Amendment XIX granting women the right to vote was ratified.



Jeannette Rankin was born near Missoula, Montana on June 11, 1880. Her father was a rancher and her mother was a schoolteacher. Jeannette was their first child. She attended public schools in Montana, and graduated from the University of Montana at Missoula in 1902 with a Bachelor of Science degree in biology. She began promoting the women’s suffrage movement - an effort to secure women’s voting rights - in 1910.



After working for the New York Women Suffrage Party and the American Woman Suffrage Association, Jeannette Rankin returned to Montana. She continued her working on women’s suffrage through speaking engagements and organization efforts. Rankins involvement helped Montanan women gain the right to vote in 1914.



Rankin decided to run as a Republican for the United States House of Representatives in 1916. Her brother a prominent businessman supported her financially. Some people thought that her campaign would sour the fight for women’s voting rights. Her victory on August 29, 2016 sealed her place in history; she became the first women elected to U.S. Congress.



Jeannette Rankin was officially sworn in as a member of 65th Congress on April 2, 1917. One of her first votes was against declaring war on Germany, which marked the United States’s entry into World War I. She continued supporting women’s suffrage, and she is appointed to a committee formed to examine the issue. In 1918, she opened debate in the U.S. House of Representatives on a resolution to grant women the right to vote. It was the precursor to the eventual constitutional amendment ratified two years later.



Rankin did not run for reelection to the U.S. House of Representatives. Instead, she sought election to the United States Senate. Her bid was very unsuccessful. She left Montana and moved to Georgia, where she purchased a farm. Despite the move, she maintained her status as a Montana resident. More than 20 years after her first term in Congress, Rankin won the 1940 election for the 77th Congress as a Montana Representative. In her second term she was an outspoken opponent of World War II. After leaving Congress in 1943, she continued to advocate for women’s rights and world peace until her death in 1973.



Under what political affiliation did Rankin run for Congress in 1917?

A. Suffrage

B. Independent

C. Republican

D. Democrat

   

Answers-Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions: Q 154-157





154

Answer [A]: The main idea of this passage is that Jeannette Rankin, an advocate for women’s suffrage, was the first woman elected to the United States Congress. While the other options are accurate information from the passage, only selection A includes the two most important points of the passage.

155

Answer [B]: Many women’s rights supporters worried that Jeannette Rankin’s run for Congress in 1916 would sour, or negatively influence the fight for women’s rights. Women could not vote in 1916, but men, as well as women supported Rankin and women’s suffrage. Although her brother did financially support Rankin when she ran for office, his involvement did not influence voters.



156

Answer [D]: When her first term in Congress was over, Rankin did not seek reelection; instead, she ran for a seat in the Senate, but did not win. She left Montana after losing her Senate bid, where she worked as a farmer. She, however, retained her status as a resident of Montana.

157

Answer [C]: Rankin ran and was elected to Congress as a Republican. She was an active promoter of Women’s rights, but there was no suffrage party. She worked for the New York Suffrage party prior to returning to Montana and running for office.

 

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