HiSET Language Arts Reading Practice Test 1
We refer to them as "savages" because they lack our manners, which we consider to be the pinnacle of civility. They feel the same way about theirs.
We might discover that no people are so polite as to be devoid of rules of etiquette, nor are any so impolite as to not possess some vestiges of impoliteness, if we were to objectively investigate the manners of other nations.
The Indian men are hunters and warriors when they are young, and counselors when they are old because all of their government comes from the advice of the Sages. There is no force, no prisons, and no officers to enforce obedience or administer punishment.— They typically focus on oratory because the best Speaker has the greatest influence. The Indian women cultivate the land, prepare the food, care for and raise the children, and preserve and transmit to future generations the memory of public deeds. These jobs for men and women are considered natural and honorable. They have plenty of free time to engage in conversation and have few false wants. When compared to their way of life, our hard work is seen as slavish and low, and the education we rely our self-worth on is seen as frivolous and pointless.
Adapted from Benjamin Franklin's "Remarks Concerning the Savages of North America" (1784)
What is Benjamin Franklin's attitude towards the "savages"?
Which definition best captures the meaning of a word?
Read the following passage and answer the question But man is not destined to vanish. He can be killed, but he cannot be destroyed, because his soul is deathless and his spirit is irrepressible. Therefore, though the situation seems dark in the context of the confrontation between the superpowers, the silver lining is provided by amazing phenomenon that the very nations which have spent incalculable resources and energy for the production of deadly weapons are desperately trying to find out how they might never be used. They threaten each other, intimidate each other and go to the brink, but before the total hour arrives they withdraw from the brink. The main point from the author's view is that
He continued to strike the clacker until his arm hurt, and eventually his heart began to empathize with the frustrated wishes of the birds. Like him, they appeared to be outsiders in a world that did not want them. Why would he want to scare them off? The only friends he could claim to be even mildly interested in him were those who were gentle friends and retirees, as his aunt had repeatedly assured him that she was not. They landed again after he stopped rattling.
"Poor little dears!" said Jude, aloud. "You shall have some dinner—you shall. There is enough for us all. Farmer Troutham can afford to let you have some. Eat, then my dear little birdies, and make a good meal!"
They stayed and ate, inky spots on the nut-brown soil, and Jude enjoyed their appetite. A magic thread of fellow-feeling united his own life with theirs. Puny and sorry as those lives were, they much resembled his own.
By this point, he had thrown his clacker away since he felt it was a cruel and repulsive weapon that was hurtful to both the birds and himself as their buddy. He suddenly felt a sharp blow to his buttocks, followed by a loud clack that informed his startled senses that the clacker had been the object of the assault. The moment the birds and Jude both stood up, Jude's bewildered eyes were met by the farmer—the great Troutham himself—glaring down at Jude's cowering form while the clacker swung in his palm.
"So it's 'Eat my dear birdies,' is it, young man? 'Eat, dear birdies,' indeed! I'll tickle your breeches, and see if you say, 'Eat, dear birdies' again in a hurry! And you've been idling at the schoolmaster's too, instead of coming here, ha'n't ye, hey? That's how you earn your sixpence a day for keeping the rooks off my corn!"
The passage supports the statement that Father Troutham is ________________.
Troutham's aggressive response to Jude's restraint demonstrates his violent nature, which is equivalent to, or at least contributes to, being "severe." Although he may believe that he pays his staff fairly, a sixpence was only around one fortieth of a pound, thus it was not a substantial sum of money. His physical stature is not mentioned in the passage.
Severus, the first name of Professor Snape in "Harry Potter," is a stern, rigorous, and severe name. Professor Snape has a severe and strict demeanor. Which of the following best describes this situation?
It is simple to show that dreams frequently bear the appearance of blatant desire fulfillments, which begs the question of why the language of dreams was not long ago discovered. For instance, I have a fantasy that I can have experimentally whenever I want. I wake up in the middle of the night from thirst after eating sardines, olives, or other foods that are very salty in the evening. However, the dream before waking up always has the same theme: I gulp down the water and it feels great to me as only a cool drink can when one is dying of thirst; after waking up, I then truly need to drink. The thirst I experience when I wake up is what led to this straightforward dream. I have a want to drink as a result of this sensation, and my dream depicts this fulfillment. Thus, it fulfills a purpose that is obvious to me. I have trouble being awakened by needs because I am a sound sleeper. I don't have to wake up to be content if I can quench my thirst by having a drink in a dream. So, this is a dream of convenience. As is so common in life, action is replaced by a dream.
Recently, a slightly altered version of this identical dream happened. Even before falling asleep, I had a thirst and drained the glass of water that was on the nightstand next to my bed. I experienced another, more uncomfortable episode of thirst a few hours later in the night. I would have needed to get up and pick up the glass from my wife's bedside in order to grab some water. So, in my dream, my wife brought me a drink from a container. This object was an Etruscan funeral urn that I had previously given away after bringing it back from an Italian vacation. But I had to wake up since the water in it tasted so salty (obviously from the ashes). It is simple to see how well this dream was organized; nevertheless, given that its sole purpose was desire fulfillment, it may have been wholly egocentric. Love of convenience and care for others are incompatible. I was sorry that I didn't own the urn any more, just as I was sad that the water glass next to my wife was out of reach. The introduction of the burial urn is perhaps another wish that has been granted. The urn also matched the salty flavor that was starting to wake me up.
The bolded and underlined statement is best described as a/an ________________.
Freud doesn't explain how he is positive that ashes are the cause of the saltiness; an assumption is a claim that is taken for granted in the absence of supporting evidence. A fact is a statement that can be verified as true even though it cannot be verified in its entirety. An observation is a claim made in response to anything the viewer has observed or heard, which does not actually apply in this case.