SIMAK UI Bahasa Inggris 2013

SIMAK UI 2013 Bahasa Inggris

  Doc. Name: SIMAKUI2013ING999 | Doc. Version : 2015-03 Kode Soal halaman 1

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  01. .... (1) Every culture interprets body lan- guage, gestures, posture and carriage, vocal noises, and degree of eye contact differently. (2) A poor traveler might have expected that nodding his or her head up and down or giv- ing a thumbs-up would indicate yes. (3) However, in the Middle East. nodding the Read down indicates agreement, while nod- ding it up is a sign Of disagreement. (4) In Japan, an up-and-down nod might just be a signal that someone is listening. (5) Yet, say- ing 'thank you' to appreciate someone signals the same meaning. (6) The thumbs-up signal is vulgar in Iran. (7) Point with the wrong finger or with anything less than your entire hand and you risk offending somebody. (8) while some cultures value eye contact di a sign of respect, averting your eyes may be the sign of respect in others. (9) In some places, people value a certain degree of per- sonal space in conversation, while those from the Middle East might get right up in your face when they want to converse. (10) Restrain the desire to pat a child on the head in Asia; there's a belief that such a touch would damage the child's soul. (11) Clearly body language expresses different things in other countries. The paragraph should begin with ... (A) Non-verbal communication can be picked up easily in a foreign land. (B) Non-verbal communication will be a Start in learning a culture. (C) Natives welcome good intention shown through non-verbal communication. (D) Contrary to popular beliefs. nonverbal communication is not universal. (E) Basic non-verbal communication is the same wherever you go.

  02. Which of the following sentence is irrele- vant ? (A) Sentences (3) (B) Sentences (5) (C) Sentences (7) (D) Sentences (8) (E) Sentences (10)

  03. Wood plays a part in more activities of the modern economy than does any other commodity. There is (43)___ any industry that does not use wood or wood products somewhere in its manufacturing and market- ing processes. Think about the (44)___ of junk mail, newspapers, photocopies and other paper products that each of us han- dles, stores, and disposes of in a single day_ Total annual world wood consumption is about 3.7 billion metric tons or about 3.7 billion m

  3 .

  This is more than steel and plastic consump- tion together. International trade In wood and wood products amounts to more than $100 billion each year. Developed countries produce less than half of all (45)___ wood but account for about 80 percent of its con- sumption. Less-developed countries, mainly in the tropics produce more than half of all wood used by industries but use only 20 per- cent. The largest producers of this kind of wood and paper pulp are the United States, the former Soviet Union, and Canada. Much of the logging In North America and Europe occurs in (46)___ forests, where cut trees are grown as crop. (47)___ tropical hardwoods in Southeast Asia. Africa, and Latin America are being cut at an unsus- tainable rate, mostly from old-growth for- ests. … . (A) Almost (B) Nearly (C) Hardly (D) Never (E) Virtually 04. ….

  (A) Accumulation (B) Number (C) Total (D) Amount (E) Figure

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  SIMAK UI 2013 Bahasa Inggris, Kode Soal

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05. ….

  (A) Industrial (B) Industrially (C) Industrious (D) Industrallized (E) Industry 06. ….

  (A) Manage (B) Managing (C) Management (D) Managerial (E) Manageable 07. ….

  (A) For example (B) Similiarly (C) In addition (D) In contrast (E) Therefore

  Alligators, which often engage in violent fights over territories and mates, have made scientists puzzled why their wounds rarely get infected. Now researchers think the se- cret lies in the reptiles` blood. Chemists in Louisiana found that blood from the Ameri- can alligator can successfully destroy 23 strains of bacteria, including strains known be resistant to antibiotics. In addition, the blood was able to deplete and destroy a sig- nificant amount of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

  Study co-author Lances Darville at Lou- isiana State University in Baton Rouge be- lieves that peptides - fragments of proteins - within alligator blood help the animals stop fatal infections. Such peptides are also found in the skin of frogs and toads, as well as ko- modo, dragons and crocodiles. The scientists think that these peptides could one day lead to medicines that would provide humans with the same antibiotic protection. 'We are in the process of separating and identifying the specific peptides in alligator blood,' said Darville. 'Once we sequence these peptides, we can obtain their chemical structure to potentially create new where bacteria thrive, alligators that suffered frequent scratches and bruises rarely developed fatal infections.

  Merchant the created human and alligator serum-protein-rich blood plasma that has been able to remove clotting agents, and ex- posed each of them to 23 strains of bacteria. Human serum destroyed only eight of the bacterial strains while the alligator serum killed all 23. When the alligator was exposed to HIV, the researchers found that a good amount of the virus was destroyed.

  The study team thinks that pills and creams containing alligator peptides could be available at level pharmacies within seven to ten years. Such products would be a solution to patients that need extra help preventing infections, such as diabetes patients with foot ulcers, burn victims and people suffer- ing from auto-immune diseases. However, there may be potential problems before alli- gator-based medicines can reach drugstore shelves. For example, initial tests have re- vealed that higher concentrations of the alli- gator serum tend to be toxic to human cells.

  08 This passage would probably be found in a (n)...

  (A) Academic journal. (B) Lifestyle magazine. (C) Medical journal. (D) Health magazine. (E) Men magazine.

  49. Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE about peptides within alligators blood?

  (A) They are fragments of proteins. (B) They may stop fatal infections. (C) They are injected in the human body. (D) They are within the blood of reptiles. (E) They are the same function as antibiot- ics.

The word „cloting‟ in line 10 is closet in meaning to ..

  These indicate that the satellites of the ter- restrial planets like Earth or Pluto were formed following a giant collision. They also indicate that the satellites of the giant planets were formed in a nebula (58)___ the planet. They do not, account for the specific distri- bution and chemical composition of the sat- ellites orbiting the giant planets.

  (A) have been commonly used (B) had been commonly used (C) will be commonly used (D) were commonly used (E) are commonly used

  16. ...

  (A) fundamental difference between giant planet systems (B) difference between giant planet funda- mental systems (C) giant fundamental systems between dif- ference planets (D) planet systems difference between giant fundamental difference (E) giant planet difference between funda- mental systems

  (A) first tested (B) to first test (C) first testing (D) was first tested (E) had first tested 15. ...

  14. ...

  (A) the last sentence of paragraph 1. (B) the fist sentence of paragraph 2. (C) the last sentence of paragraph 2. (D) the first sentence of paragraph 3. (E) the last sentence of paragraph 3.

  13. This sentence “ another theory, therefore, seemed necessary.” Should be put as ...

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  SIMAK UI 2013 Bahasa Inggris, Kode Soal

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10.

  Two French researchers have recently proposed the first ever model explaining how the great majority of regular satellites in our solar system were formed out of planet rings. The model, the only one of its kind, (54)___ in 2010 on Saturn‟s moons. It seems to ac- cout for the present disctribution of “giant” planets and also explains how the satellites of the “terrestrial” planets such as Earth or Pluto came into being. These results are a major step forward in under standing and (55)___ the formation of planet systems across the universe.

  America alligators (E) Alligator serum has the possibility to harm human beings

  (A) Scientists are now searching for a medi- cine against HIV (B) Alligator have contributed a lot to stop human life (C) Reptiles have peptides which can be used as serum (D) Peptides in the blood are only found in

  12. The writer concludes his essay by saying that ...

  (A) Deleloped two kinds of serum, each can destroy 23 strains of bacteria. (B) Learned why alligators can survive in bacterial environments. (C) Became interested in alligators resistance to infections. (D) Created a serum which can remove things that cause clotting. (E) Found out that crocodiles can decrease infection caused by HIV.

  11. The following are what Merchant, the bio- chemist, experienced EXCEPT that he ….

  (A) Setting. (B) Accumulating. (C) Thickening. (D) Dotting. (E) Softening.

  There is a (56)___ such as Jupiter and Saturn, and the terrestrial plants, such as Earth or Pluto. Whereas the giants are sur- rounded by rings and a myriad of small natu- ral satellites, the terrestrial planets have few moons, or just one and no rings. Until now, two models (57)___ to explains the presence of regular satellites in our solar system.

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  SIMAK UI 2013 Bahasa Inggris, Kode Soal

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17. ....

  (A) surrounding (B) surrounded (C) will surround (D) which surround (E) which surrounded

  In 2010 and 2011, a French research team developed a new model to describe how Saturn's moons came into being based on numerical simulations and Cassini probe data. The researchers discovered that Sat- urn's rings, (59)___ are very thin disks made up of small blocks of ice surrounding the planet, in turn gave birth to ice satellites. This is due to the fact that the rings spread over time and, when they reach a certain dis- tance from the planet (known as the Roche limit or Roche radius), (60)___ ends agglom- erate and form small bodies that break off and move away. This is how rings give birth to satellites orbiting the planet. 18. ...

  (A) that (B) which (C) who (D) when (E) where 19. ...

  (A) it (B) its (C)

It‟s

  (D) they (E) their