PARAGRAF DOLDURMA(TEST 1)
1) Ever since universities have existed there have been arguments about what books should be
taught to students. —-. Others have maintained that such a practice does not help the students
to distinguish between the good and the bad. Instead, they have suggested that students
should be exposed to a wider range of writing.
A) Some have acquired that students should be introduced to the “great” books of the world.
B) In fact, university authorities have always concerned themselves with this problem.
C) This is not to say that all students should read the same books.
D) The decision taken was that we limit ourselves to the world classics.
E) The problem was heatedly debated right through the 1950s.
2) In Britain today every household with a TV set must, by law, pay for a license which costs
about the same for a year as a popular newspaper every day. A few people including those with
noncolour TV pay less. —- .Another important source is the selling of its productions to other
broadcasting stations.
A) The BBC enjoyed a monopoly until 1954.
B) Unlike the press the BBC has rarely been accused of being partial.
C) The new payments are mainly compulsory subscription to the BBC, which derives nearly all of its
funds from this source.
D) News programs and films still attract the largest audience.
E) Since the 1970s most British households have had TV sets able to receive channels.
household: (i) ev halkı / subscription: (i) abone; abone ücreti / derive: (f) çıkarmak, almak;
istihraç etmek; gram türemek, müştak olmak; kökünü araştırmak; sâdır olmak, hâsıl olmak
3) The Times newspaper has three weekly supplements all published and sold separately.
These are The Times Literary Supplement, The Times Education Supplement and The Times
Higher Education Supplements.—- .It is devoted almost entirely to reviews and covers all kinds
of new literature.
A) Obviously they influence the way people think to a considerable extent.
B) Glossy weekly magazines cater for special interests.
C) Both of these appeal only to a restricted number of people.
D) Of these the Literary Supplement has the biggest number of readers.
E) They make good use of academic contributions on issues related to education and literature.
supplement: (i) ilâve, ek; mat bütünler açı / cater: (f) yiyecek tedarik etmek
4) In general, the farther north one goes in England the more adequate are roads for the traffic
they have to carry. —- .But the roads in the south of England, apart from the motorways which
radiate from London must be among the most inadequate in Europe. Traffic there frequently
moves at walking pace.
A) It is advisable to use the metro in London: for traffic jams make other forms of transport completely
unreliable.
B) Wales and Scotland for instance are well-designed with great lengths of nearly empty dual
carriage ways.
C) The noise of the traffic has, in fact, increased very little in recent years.
D) Similarly in London traffic hardly moves faster now than it did a century ago when vehicles were
horse-drawn.
E) Several new schemes are now being considered to alleviate this condition
radiate: yaymak / dual: (s) çifte / alleviate: (f) hafifletmek
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