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Question 1
Which Planet Is Known As The Red Planet?
Question 1
Which Gas Do Plants Primarily Use During Photosynthesis?
Question 1
Who Wrote "Romeo And Juliet"?
Question 1
What Is The Longest River In Africa?
Question 1
In What Year Was The United States Declaration Of Independence Adopted?
Question 1
What Is The Area Of A 5-By-7 Rectangle?
Question 1
What Is The Chemical Formula For Water?
Question 1
Choose The Best Synonym For "Rapid. "
Question 1
Who Composed "Für Elise"?
Question 1
Who Painted The "Mona Lisa"?
Question 1
Approximately How Strong Is Earth’s Gravitational Acceleration?
Question 1
Which Trio Lists The Three Branches Of The U. S. Government?
Question 1
What Is The Capital Of Japan?
Question 1
What Is The Smallest Unit Of Life?
Question 1
What PH Value Is Neutral At 25°C?
Question 1
Why Were The Great Pyramids Of Giza Built?
Question 1
What Is 3/4 + 1/8?
Question 1
What Does "HTTP" Stand For?
Question 1
Which Rock Type Forms From Cooled Lava Or Magma?
Question 1
What Is Inflation?
Question 1
Which Is The Largest Ocean On Earth?
Question 1
Who Wrote "1984"?
Question 1
Which Organ Pumps Blood Throughout The Human Body?
Question 1
Compute: 12 × 8
Question 1
What Is The Chemical Formula For Table Salt?
Question 1
Who Was The First President Of The United States?
Question 1
Which Country Lies In Both Europe And Asia?
Question 1
What Is The Correct Plural Of "Child"?
Question 1
Which Art Movement Is Claude Monet Associated With?
Question 1
How Many Semitones Are In One Octave?
Question 1
Which Fruit Is A Well-Known Source Of Vitamin C?
Question 1
About How Fast Does Light Travel In A Vacuum?
Question 1
Which Freedom Is Protected By The First Amendment?
Question 1
Barcelona Is A Major City In Which Country?
Question 1
Who Is Credited With Composing "The Odyssey"?
Question 1
What Green Pigment Allows Plants To Capture Light Energy?
Question 1
Which Layer Of Earth Do We Live On?
Question 1
In Computing, What Does CPU Stand For?
Question 1
What Is The Perimeter Of A Square With Side Length 9?
Question 1
Which State Of Matter Has A Definite Volume But No Definite Shape?
Question 1
The Cold War Was Primarily Between Which Two Superpowers?
Question 1
Which Desert Dominates Northern Africa?
Question 1
Who Wrote "To Kill A Mockingbird"?
Question 1
What Is The Largest Organ Of The Human Body?
Question 1
Which Number Below Is Prime?
Question 1
Which Gas Contributes Significantly To The Greenhouse Effect?
Question 1
The Violin Belongs To Which Instrument Family?
Question 1
What Document Is The Supreme Law Of The United States?
Question 1
Which South American Country Is Landlocked?
Question 1
A Comparison Using "Like" Or "As" Is Called What?
Question 1
Which Statement Best Expresses Newton’s Third Law?
Question 1
What Is The Mean Of 5, 7, And 9?
Question 1
The River Flowing Through Paris Is The:
Question 1
In What Year Was The Magna Carta Signed?
Question 1
DNA Stands For:
Question 1
In The Periodic Table, Rows Are Called:
Question 1
Prospero Is A Character In Which Shakespeare Play?
Question 1
What Is π Rounded To Two Decimal Places?
Question 1
What Causes Most Earthquakes?
Question 1
Which U.S. State Is Nicknamed "The Sunshine State"?
Question 1
Which Are The Traditional Primary Colors In Painting?
Question 1
In Music, "Allegro" Indicates What Tempo?
Question 1
Identify The Subject In "The Cats On The Porch Are Sleeping."
Question 1
How Many U.S. Senators Are There?
Question 1
Where Does Digestion Begin?
Question 1
What Is The Boiling Point Of Water At Sea Level (°C)?
Question 1
Canberra Is The Capital Of Which Country?
Question 1
Who Reached The Americas In 1492 Under The Spanish Flag?
Question 1
Compute: 45 ÷ 9
Question 1
The SI Unit Of Energy Is The:
Question 1
Who Wrote "The Great Gatsby"?
Question 1
Mount Everest Belongs To Which Mountain Range?
Question 1
Which Blood Cells Carry Oxygen?
Question 1
The Chemical Symbol "Fe" Represents Which Element?
Question 1
Who Sculpted "The Thinker"?
Question 1
In Music Notation, A Symbol Indicating Silence Is Called A:
Question 1
Choose The Correct Use Of There/Their/They’re:
Question 1
What Type Of Government Gives Power To The People Directly Or Through Representatives?
Question 1
Which Country Shares The Iberian Peninsula With Spain?
Question 1
What Was The War Between The Union And Confederacy Called?
Question 1
Evaluate 4!
Question 1
What Term Describes Maintaining A Stable Internal Environment?
Question 1
A Uniform Mixture Of Solute And Solvent Is Called A:
Question 1
Most Weather Occurs In Which Layer Of The Atmosphere?
Question 1
A Fourteen-Line Poem With A Specific Rhyme Scheme Is A:
Question 1
What Does "URL" Stand For?
Question 1
Which Country Currently Has The Largest Population?
Question 1
What Is 25% Of 200?
Question 1
Which Civilization Built Machu Picchu?
Question 1
What Is The Nearest Star To Earth?
1
Jupiter
2
Mercury
3
Venus
4
Mars
Mars appears reddish due to iron oxide dust on its surface, giving it the famous Red Planet nickname.
1
Helium
2
Nitrogen
3
Oxygen
4
Carbon dioxide
Plants take in carbon dioxide to produce glucose and oxygen using sunlight and chlorophyll during photosynthesis.
1
Jane Austen
2
Charles Dickens
3
William Shakespeare
4
Mark Twain
Shakespeare authored "Romeo and Juliet," a tragic play exploring youthful love, family feuds, and fate.
1
Niger River
2
Nile River
3
Zambezi River
4
Congo River
Most reference sources list the Nile as Africa’s longest river, stretching northward to the Mediterranean Sea.
1
1492
2
1783
3
1776
4
1812
The Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, establishing America’s independence.
1
12 square units
2
70 square units
3
35 square units
4
25 square units
Rectangle area equals length times width, so 5 multiplied by 7 equals 35 square units.
1
H2O2
2
OH
3
H2O
4
HO2
Water molecules contain two hydrogen atoms bonded to one oxygen atom, represented by the formula H2O.
1
Swift
2
Distant
3
Fragile
4
Circular
"Swift" closely matches "rapid," both describing something happening quickly or moving at high speed.
1
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
2
Ludwig van Beethoven
3
Johann Sebastian Bach
4
Frédéric Chopin
Beethoven composed "Für Elise," a popular Bagatelle in A minor known for its memorable opening theme.
1
Pablo Picasso
2
Vincent van Gogh
3
Michelangelo
4
Leonardo da Vinci
Leonardo da Vinci painted the "Mona Lisa," celebrated for its enigmatic smile and sfumato technique.
1
9.8 meters per second squared
2
3.2 meters per second squared
3
1.6 meters per second squared
4
98 meters per second squared
Near Earth’s surface, gravitational acceleration averages about 9.8 m/s², determining how objects fall.
1
Legislative, Military, Judicial
2
Legislative, Diplomatic, Executive
3
Executive, Judicial, Monetary
4
Legislative, Executive, Judicial
The U.S. Constitution divides power among legislative, executive, and judicial branches to ensure checks and balances.
1
Tokyo
2
Hiroshima
3
Kyoto
4
Osaka
Tokyo is Japan’s capital and largest metropolitan area, serving as the nation’s political and economic center.
1
Tissue
2
Organism
3
Organ
4
Cell
The cell is the basic structural and functional unit of living things, capable of independent life processes.
1
10
2
7
3
1
4
14
On the pH scale, 7 is neutral, with lower values acidic and higher values basic or alkaline.
1
Grain storage facilities
2
Tombs for pharaohs
3
Military fortresses
4
Astronomical observatories
The pyramids served as monumental tombs for pharaohs, reflecting beliefs about the afterlife and royal divinity.
1
1/2
2
5/8
3
7/8
4
1
Converting 3/4 to 6/8, then adding 1/8 yields 7/8, using common denominators for addition.
1
High-Tech Transmission Program
2
Hyper Terminal Transport Protocol
3
Hyperlink Tracking Procedure
4
Hypertext Transfer Protocol
HTTP is the foundational web protocol enabling browsers and servers to request and deliver hypertext resources.
1
Metamorphic
2
Igneous
3
Sedimentary
4
Biogenic
Igneous rocks crystallize from molten material—magma beneath Earth’s surface or lava after volcanic eruptions.
1
A general rise in prices over time
2
Government control of wages
3
An increase in national exports
4
A decrease in unemployment rates
Inflation describes sustained price increases that reduce purchasing power, measured by indices like CPI.
1
Indian Ocean
2
Atlantic Ocean
3
Arctic Ocean
4
Pacific Ocean
Covering more area than all land combined, the Pacific is Earth’s largest and deepest ocean basin.
1
George Orwell
2
Ray Bradbury
3
Aldous Huxley
4
Arthur C. Clarke
George Orwell’s "1984" depicts a dystopian society with pervasive surveillance, propaganda, and authoritarian control.
1
Heart
2
Liver
3
Lungs
4
Kidneys
The heart’s muscular chambers contract rhythmically to circulate oxygenated and deoxygenated blood through vessels.
1
84
2
108
3
92
4
96
Multiplying 12 by 8 equals 96, found using repeated addition or standard multiplication algorithms.
1
NaCl
2
KCl
3
CaCl2
4
Na2CO3
Common table salt consists of sodium chloride, where sodium and chloride ions form an ionic compound.
1
James Madison
2
John Adams
3
Thomas Jefferson
4
George Washington
George Washington served as the nation’s first president from 1789 to 1797, establishing many presidential precedents.
1
Italy
2
Morocco
3
Turkey
4
Ireland
Turkey spans the continents, with Thrace in Europe and Anatolia in Asia, divided by the Bosporus.
1
Childes
2
Children
3
Childrens
4
Childs
"Children" is the irregular plural form of "child," following historical linguistic patterns in English.
1
Cubism
2
Impressionism
3
Baroque
4
Surrealism
Monet’s light-filled brushwork and outdoor scenes helped define Impressionism’s focus on momentary visual impressions.
1
12
2
8
3
6
4
10
Western equal temperament divides an octave into 12 equal semitone steps, forming chromatic scales.
1
Pear
2
Banana
3
Orange
4
Apple
Citrus fruits like oranges supply abundant vitamin C, supporting immune function and collagen synthesis.
1
About 3,000 kilometers per second
2
About 30,000 kilometers per second
3
About 3,000,000 kilometers per second
4
About 300,000 kilometers per second
Light speed is approximately 299,792 kilometers per second, often rounded to 300,000 for simplicity.
1
Freedom from quartering soldiers
2
Freedom to bear arms
3
Freedom from unreasonable searches
4
Freedom of speech
The First Amendment protects speech, press, religion, assembly, and petition against government interference.
1
Portugal
2
Spain
3
France
4
Italy
Barcelona, capital of Catalonia, sits on Spain’s northeastern Mediterranean coast, famed for Gaudí architecture.
1
Homer
2
Herodotus
3
Virgil
4
Sophocles
Ancient Greek poet Homer is traditionally credited with "The Odyssey," chronicling Odysseus’s long journey home.
1
Keratin
2
Melanin
3
Chlorophyll
4
Hemoglobin
Chlorophyll absorbs primarily red and blue light, driving photosynthesis within chloroplasts.
1
Inner core
2
Mantle
3
Outer core
4
Crust
Earth’s crust is the thin, solid outer layer supporting continents and ocean basins.
1
Central Processing Unit
2
Computer Power Utility
3
Central Peripheral Unit
4
Core Performance Unit
The CPU executes instructions, performing arithmetic, logic, and control operations essential to computing.
1
18 units
2
81 units
3
36 units
4
9 units
Square perimeter equals four times a side, so 4 × 9 equals 36.
1
Liquid
2
Plasma
3
Solid
4
Gas
Liquids have definite volume yet conform to container shape, unlike solids and compressible gases.
1
Britain and France
2
United States and Germany
3
United States and Soviet Union
4
China and Japan
After World War II, geopolitical tension dominated between the U.S. and U.S.S.R. across decades.
1
Atacama
2
Kalahari
3
Sahara
4
Gobi
Spanning multiple countries, the Sahara is the world’s largest hot desert by area.
1
Ernest Hemingway
2
Harper Lee
3
John Steinbeck
4
J.D. Salinger
Harper Lee’s novel addresses racial injustice and moral growth through Scout Finch’s perspective.
1
Heart
2
Skin
3
Liver
4
Brain
Skin serves as a protective barrier, regulating temperature and defending against pathogens.
1
27
2
21
3
29
4
30
Twenty-nine has no positive divisors other than 1 and itself, satisfying primality.
1
Neon
2
Hydrogen
3
Argon
4
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide traps heat in Earth’s atmosphere, enhancing the greenhouse effect alongside methane and water vapor.
1
Strings
2
Percussion
3
Woodwinds
4
Brass
Violins produce sound from vibrating strings amplified by a wooden body, characteristic of string instruments.
1
The Bill of Rights
2
The Constitution
3
The Federalist Papers
4
The Declaration of Independence
The Constitution establishes the national framework and is the highest legal authority.
1
Chile
2
Ecuador
3
Bolivia
4
Peru
Bolivia lost its coastline in the 19th century and remains landlocked in central South America.
1
Hyperbole
2
Metaphor
3
Alliteration
4
Simile
Similes use "like" or "as" to draw explicit comparisons between two different things.
1
Objects in motion stay in motion unless acted upon
2
For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction
3
Force equals mass times acceleration
4
Energy cannot be created or destroyed
Newton’s third law describes mutual forces acting on interacting bodies with equal magnitude and opposite direction.
1
7
2
7.5
3
8
4
6
The average equals sum divided by count; (5 + 7 + 9) ÷ 3 equals 21 ÷ 3 equals 7.
1
Seine
2
Thames
3
Danube
4
Rhine
Paris lies along the Seine, which winds through the city’s historic center and beyond.
1
1215
2
1492
3
1066
4
1314
English nobles compelled King John to seal the Magna Carta at Runnymede in 1215.
1
Dioxynuclear acid
2
Deoxyribose nucleate
3
Deoxyribonucleic acid
4
Dinucleotide acid
DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid, carries genetic information using sequences of nucleotides in chromosomes.
1
Groups
2
Families
3
Periods
4
Blocks
Horizontal rows are periods, while vertical columns are groups with similar valence electron structures.
1
Othello
2
Hamlet
3
Macbeth
4
The Tempest
Prospero, the exiled Duke of Milan, orchestrates events on a magical island in "The Tempest."
1
3.15
2
3.13
3
3.12
4
3.14
Pi approximates 3.14159, which rounds to 3.14 at two decimal places.
1
Lunar tides
2
Strong winds
3
Volcanic ash accumulation
4
Movement of tectonic plates
Stress build-up and release along faults at plate boundaries generate seismic waves causing earthquakes.
1
Texas
2
Florida
3
Arizona
4
California
Florida’s warm climate and many sunny days earned it the nickname "The Sunshine State."
1
Orange, purple, green
2
Cyan, magenta, yellow
3
Red, blue, yellow
4
Red, green, blue
Traditional pigment primary colors are red, blue, and yellow for mixing other hues.
1
Fast
2
Very slow
3
Moderate
4
Slow
Allegro directs performers to play quickly and brightly, conveying energetic character.
1
On the porch
2
Are sleeping
3
The cats
4
The porch
"The cats" perform the action, making it the sentence’s subject.
1
435
2
50
3
100
4
9
Each state elects two senators, totaling 100 for 50 states.
1
Mouth
2
Stomach
3
Small intestine
4
Esophagus
Salivary enzymes like amylase start breaking down food in the mouth during chewing.
1
50°C
2
100°C
3
0°C
4
212°C
At one atmosphere pressure, water boils at 100°C; 212°F is the equivalent Fahrenheit temperature.
1
Australia
2
New Zealand
3
Canada
4
South Africa
Canberra was chosen as Australia’s capital, balancing rivalry between Sydney and Melbourne.
1
Amerigo Vespucci
2
Vasco da Gama
3
Christopher Columbus
4
Ferdinand Magellan
Sponsored by Spain, Columbus’s 1492 voyage reached Caribbean islands, initiating sustained European contact.
1
5
2
4
3
9
4
6
Dividing 45 by 9 equals 5, since 9 times 5 equals 45.
1
Watt
2
Joule
3
Newton
4
Volt
Energy in the International System is measured in joules; power uses watts, force uses newtons.
1
T.S. Eliot
2
F. Scott Fitzgerald
3
John Steinbeck
4
William Faulkner
Fitzgerald’s novel critiques wealth, aspiration, and the American Dream through Jay Gatsby’s story.
1
Andes
2
Alps
3
Himalayas
4
Rockies
Everest sits along the Nepal–China border within the towering Himalayan range.
1
Platelets
2
Red blood cells
3
Plasma cells
4
White blood cells
Red blood cells contain hemoglobin that binds oxygen for transport throughout the body.
1
Fluorine
2
Silver
3
Iron
4
Lead
From Latin "ferrum," Fe denotes iron on the periodic table.
1
Auguste Rodin
2
Bernini
3
Michelangelo
4
Donatello
Rodin’s "The Thinker" depicts a contemplative figure from his larger work "The Gates of Hell."
1
Tie
2
Rest
3
Clef
4
Sharp
A rest marks measured silence in music, with different shapes for durations.
1
They’re going to park there bikes over their after lunch.
2
Their going to park they’re bikes over there after lunch.
3
They’re going to park their bikes over there after lunch.
4
There going to park their bikes over they’re after lunch.
"They’re" means "they are," "their" shows possession, and "there" indicates location, used correctly in option A.
1
Dictatorship
2
Monarchy
3
Democracy
4
Oligarchy
Democracies vest authority in citizens, who vote directly or elect representatives to govern.
1
Italy
2
Greece
3
France
4
Portugal
Portugal occupies the western portion of the Iberian Peninsula alongside Spain.
1
The Revolutionary War
2
The Spanish-American War
3
The War of 1812
4
The American Civil War
From 1861 to 1865, the American Civil War determined the Union’s preservation and ended slavery.
1
16
2
24
3
32
4
12
Factorial 4! equals 4 × 3 × 2 × 1, resulting in 24.
1
Phototropism
2
Metastasis
3
Homeostasis
4
Mitosis
Homeostasis keeps internal conditions like temperature and pH within narrow ranges despite external changes.
1
Solution
2
Emulsion
3
Colloid
4
Suspension
In solutions, particles are molecularly dispersed, resulting in uniform composition throughout.
1
Thermosphere
2
Mesosphere
3
Stratosphere
4
Troposphere
Weather systems form in the troposphere, where most atmospheric water vapor and clouds exist.
1
Sonnet
2
Haiku
3
Ode
4
Limerick
Sonnets traditionally have fourteen lines, often with iambic pentameter and structured rhyme.
1
Unified Reference Locator
2
Universal Routing Link
3
Universal Resource List
4
Uniform Resource Locator
A URL specifies the address of resources on the internet, such as web pages and files.
1
United States
2
India
3
Indonesia
4
China
India surpassed China in population, becoming the world’s most populous nation in recent years.
1
40
2
50
3
25
4
75
Twenty-five percent equals one-quarter; one-quarter of 200 is 50.
1
Olmec
2
Inca
3
Aztec
4
Maya
The Inca constructed Machu Picchu in the Andes, likely as a royal estate or ceremonial site.
1
Alpha Centauri A
2
Sirius
3
Proxima Centauri
4
The Sun
The Sun is our local star, providing light and energy essential for life on Earth.
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