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Free Admission Tests GMAT Practice Exam with Questions & Answers | Set: 11

Questions 101

GMAT Question 101

Options:
A.

Statement (1) ALONE is sufficient, but statement (2) alone Is not sufficient.

B.

Statement (2) ALONE is sufficient, but statement (1) alone Is not sufficient.

C.

BOTH statements TOGETHER are sufficient, but NEITHER statement ALONE Is sufficient.

D.

EACH statement ALONE is sufficient.

E.

Statements (1) and (2) TOGETHER are NOT sufficient.

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Questions 102

GMAT Question 102

Select from the drop-down menus the options that create the statement that te most clearly supported by the Information In the graph.

GMAT Question 102

Options:
Questions 103

GMAT Question 103

Which of the following statements most accurately describes the relationship between the study's results and the researchers’ hypotheses?

Options:
A.

The results in both the auction and negotiation scenarios contradicted the researchers’ hypotheses.

B.

The results in the auction scenario were consistent with the researchers’ hypotheses, but the results in the negotiation scenario contradicted the researchers' hypotheses.

C.

The results in the negotiation scenario were consistent with the researchers! hypotheses, but the results in the auction scenario contradicted the researchers’ hypotheses.

D.

The results in both the auction and negotiation scenarios were consistent with the researchers! hypotheses.

E.

Neither the results in the auction nor the negotiation scenarios are relevant to the researchers' hypotheses.

Questions 104

GMAT Question 104

In order to better control traffic at a certain busy intersection, a study was conducted to determine how many vehicles passed through the intersection during various times of day and what trajectories they took. For each possible trajectory (combination of direction from which a vehicle entered the intersection and direction to which it exited the Intersection), the graph shows the number of vehicles passing through the intersection during a certain hour.

GMAT Question 104

Options:
Questions 105

A motorist passing through an unfamiliar city needs to fill her car's fuel tank soon, well before she leaves the city, and needs to minimize her expenses. Nearby is the King Petrol station, offering the correct fuel for 2.OX) euros per liter. She has seen about one petrol station every 2 kilometers (km) of driving, on average, though distances vary. Prices at different petrol stations appear to vary randomly by up to 10%: roughly 2 km behind her in her journey she saw the correct fuel for 1.81 euros per liter. The fuel efficiency of her car under the current driving conditions is about 10 liters per 100 km. She could get a small amount of fuel at one station to allow her to drive to another station within the city.

On the basis of the information in the passage, select for Reason to stop the factor that most clearly provides a logical reason for the motorist to stop at the King Petrol station. And select for Reason not to stop the factor that most clearly provides a logical reason for the motorist not to stop at the King Petrol station. Make only two selections, one in each column.

GMAT Question 105

Options:

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