Tuesday, February 19, 2013

The New Orleans That Was by Curtis Wilkie

Part A.
1. The main idea of the selection is that New Orleans
b) exerts an exotic and hypnotic appeal that made it a unique  place, one unlikely any other Southern city.
2. The writer's purpose is to
a) write a retrospective look at New Orleans, showing its cultural influences, distinctive characteristics, and unique appeal.

Part B.
1. Wilkie states that the city's uniqueness - its history and culture - derives from
d) the presence of water.
2. New Orleans i unlike other Southern cities, which he characterizes as
b) soulless and  sprawling metropolises.
3. According to Wilkie, the spirit of New Orleans residents is represented by their
a) determination to enjoy life in spite of adversity.
4. Which of the following was not referred to in the essay as a slogan for New Orleans?
c) "Sin City"
5. Wilkie writes that New Orleans has had less racial conflict than other Southern cities largely because of
d) the influence of the Roman Catholic Church.

Part E.
1. She had learnt from the girls at the salon how to appear perfectly poised.
2. Devil-may-care young, pilots are the reasons for most air crashes.
3. They loved to visit exotic places.
4. Complacency is endemic in the industry today.
5. In Scotland 'goods' includes all corporeal movables except money.
6. The road to happiness is paved with adversities.
7. Doing many things at the same time is so disorienting.
8. The engine had been making an ominous sound all the way from London.
9. He lives in a tony neighborhood of Los Angeles.
10. There's great mystique surrounding the life of a movie star.
11. The Prime Minister was in a defiant mood in the Parliament.
12. Aluminum is a conductive metal.

Refugee's Journey by K. Oanh Ha

Part A.
1. Here are four excerpts from the selection. Which best represents the central idea of the selection as a whole?
b) Now, after  a lifetime of embracing my assimilation into American life, I am travelling back in time to find out more about who we were before we were changed.
2. With respect to the main idea, the writer's purpose is to 
d) retrace her family's history before they became assimilated by revisiting the refugee camp, their way station between Vietnam and the United States.

Part B.
1. Ha states that her family's immigration experience was different from that of other immigrant families because her family
c) were forced to leave, making their exile more difficult to accept.
2. Ha's family was forced to leave Vietnam because
a) the communist government confiscated the assets of Vietnamese of Chinese descent and then expelled them.
3. In the refugee camp at Puala Bidong, Ha's mother was forced to sell her gold wedding necklace in order to obtain
b) shelter.
4. When the writer was growing up, she experienced a "hyphenated American life," meaning that she
d) looked Vietnamese but was really Americanized.
5. When Ha returned to the Malaysian island and the site of the refugee camp, she found
a) that nature had reclaimed it and that little of the camp was left.

Part E.
1. the scraggly shapes - ragged, unkempt
2. four harrowing pirate attacks - keenly disturbing, distressing
3. our forced exile is a scar - removal from one's country
4. our assimilation began - process of being absorbed, integrated
5. began expelling them - driving or forcing out
6. the boat exodus - mass departure, flight
7. a pilgrimage of sorts - journey to a sacred place, shrine
8. my past is receding - retreating, withdrawing
9. my mother taunted me - mocked, teased
10. after years of futilely trying - uselessly, in vain