SAT强化语法讲义-李侃(2009暑假版)-附答案
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SAT Grammar
Li Kan
Beijing New Oriental School
International Tests Training Program Department
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Aim:
This course is designed to provide students with the basic grammar knowledge, general skills for each type of questions and reasoning techniques necessary for doing well on the SAT grammar, which is included in the SAT writing section. The course will also provide students with the
test-taking skills, language expertise, and guidance which students need to achieve their goals and maximize their SAT score.
Objectives:
The major objectives of the training program are to help the students:
•Familiarizing the students with the SAT
•Familiarizing the students with the format and directions of the SAT grammar part •Understanding the most frequently tested grammatical points and the ways in which these points are tested
•Developing general skills for each types of questions, i.e. ISE, IS and IP questions •Cultivating students’ awareness to express their ideas clearly, effectively, and accurately •Enhancing students’ ability to use the reasoning ability and the grammatical knowledge to do well in the SAT grammar section
Required Materials:
Official Guide to the SAT test
Suggested Materials:
SAT Online Tests
SAT questions of the day
SAT authentic papers
SAT语法部分综述:
我们的目标:
ISE典型例题:
(1) The light emitted by high-intensity-discharge car headlights are(A) very effective in activating(B) the reflective paints of road markers, thereby(C) making driving at night(D) safer. No error (E)
(2) Joseph Pulitzer, a Hungarian-born immigrant(A) to the United States and an innovator in the field(B) of popular journalism, who established(C) the Pulitzer Prizes in(D) journalism and literature. No error (E)
(3) Mr. Johnson’s assumption that a teenager had robbed his house being unfounded(A), for
(B) the witnesses described the person they had seen(C) fleeing as a woman(D). No error (E)
(4) Because the garden was untended(A), the windows had no(B) shutters, and the lawn overrun(C) by weeds, people passing by(D) the old house assumed that it was unoccupied. No error (E)
(5) Many jazz enthusiasts would have to admit(A) that their having(B)unjustly overlooked
(C) the music of Bennie Nawahi, who popularized(D) the Hawaiian steel guitar sound in the early 1930’s. No error (E)
(6) The grooved and barbed spears of the box jellyfish, each(A)trailed by(B) a poison thread, is released(C)when(D) the animal is threatened. No error (E)
(7) Among(A) the most dangerous environmental threats that we face are(B)
“compu-garbage”, the nonbiodegradable and often toxic(C) waste resulting from the improper disposal of(D) obsolete personal computers. No error (E)
(8) A farmer’s field can have more than 50,000 weed seeds per square meter(A) buried beneath the soil surface seeds (B) buried more than about one centimeter below(C) the soil surface do not receive enough (D) light to germinate. No error (E)
(9) The Neuse River in North Carolina is thought to be(A) about two million years old, and there has(B) likely been human settlements in the basin for(C) at least(D) 14,000 years. No error (E)
(10) Relying on dams for large-scale water storage and for(A) delivering water to places where(B) it does not naturally occur have(C) long-term effects on the balance between(D) groundwater and surface water and on the quality of the surrounding soil. No error (E)
(11) Beginning in(A) the 1830’s, walking footraces in England, the United States, and continental Europe became mass spectator sports that(B) sometimes attract(C)over(D) 25,000 people. No error (E)
(12) In the fifteenth century, Leonardo da Vinci suggested that defective vision can be corrected(A) by placing(B) a lens in direct contact(C)with(D) the eye. No error (E)
(13) Until recently, most people entering(A) politics feel (B) that loss of privacy was a fair price(C) to pay for(D) the chance to participate in policy making. No error (E)