BAKELITEThe birth of modem plastics
Questions 1 - 3
Some plastics behave in a similar way to 1 . In that they melt under heat and can be moulded into new forms. Bakelite was unique because it was the first material to be both entirely 2 in origin, and thermosetting. There were several reasons for the research into plastics in the nineteenth century, among them the great advances that had been made in the field of 3 and the search for alternatives to natural resources like ivory. |
Questions 4 - 8
4 5 6 7 8 |
Questions 9 - 10
Which TWO of the following factors influencing the design of Bakelite objects are mentioned in the text?
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
Question (11)
11 Modern-day plastic preparation is based on the same principles as that patented in 1907.
12 Bakelite was immediately welcomed as a practical and versatile material.
13 Bakelite was only available in a limited range of colours.
Question (14)
14 Arthur Koestler considered laughter biologically important in several ways.
15 Plato believed humour to be a sign of above-average intelligence.
16 Kant believed that a successful joke involves the controlled release of nervous energy.
17 Current thinking on humour has largely ignored Aristotle's view on the subject.
18 Graeme Ritchie's work links jokes to artificial intelligence.
19 Most comedians use personal situations as a source of humour.
20 Chimpanzees make particular noises when they are playing.
Questions 21 - 23
21 22 23 |
Questions 24 - 27
One of the brain's most difficult tasks is to 24 Because of the language they have developed, humans 25 Individual responses to humour 26 Peter Derks believes that humour
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Questions 28 - 34
In Europe, modem science emerged at the same time as the nation state. At first, the scientific language of choice remained 28 It allowed scientists to communicate with other socially privileged thinkers while protecting their work from unwanted exploitation. Sometimes the desire to protect ideas seems to have been stronger than the desire to communicate them, particularly in the case of mathematicians and 29 In Britain, moreover, scientists worried that English had neither the 30 nor the 31 to express their ideas. This situation only changed after 1660 when scientists associated with the 32 set about developing English. An early scientific journal fostered a new kind of writing based on short descriptions of specific experiments. Although English was then overtaken by 33 it developed again in the 19th century as a direct result of the 34 |
Question (35)
35 There was strong competition between scientists in Renaissance Europe.
36 The most important scientific development of the Renaissance period was the discovery of magnetism.
37 In 17th-century Britain, leading thinkers combined their interest in science with an interest in how to express ideas.
Questions 38 - 40
Science written in the first half of the 17th century
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