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Answer all questions, then review your results with feedback at the end.
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Q1: When you take the test, read through all the questions before you start to write. Allot time for each question, spending more time for questions worth the most points. Read each question carefully to determine exactly what is they asked. Pay attention to words such as define, illustrate, explain, list, compare, and contrast. Each work require a different type of response. a brief outlines of your answer on scrap paper or the back of the test. Make sure you include all the important ideas that are within the limits of the question. In other words, do not write more than is asked for each answer. When you write answer, keep it specific and as brief as possible. In the introductory sentence it is often helpful to make a general statement that includes important points addressed in each question. Such a topic sentence serves as a framework for your answer. Then use your outline to develop the main point and subtopics. Add substance to your answer by including as many facts as possible to support your answer.Check your paper before you submit it. Look for mistakes in grammar, spelling, sentence structure, and punctuation. Unless you are certain an answer is wrong, do not change it. Your answer is an educated guess and is usually your best chance of answering correctly.In answering subjective questions, the student should?
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Q2: Facts about the One Dollar Bill
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Q3: Over the last few decades, medical experts have changed their thinking on the health effects of some common foods and beverages.Higher-fat foods and some alcoholic beverages like red wine and beer, once viewed as top threats to a healthy lifestyle, are now seen by many as less harmful and even as having some health benefits. But there is perhaps no topic that the medical community has reversed its thinking on more often than coffee. Since long before the advent of modern medicine, public opinion regarding the health effects of coffee has been diverse and ever-changing.Opinion on coffee's health effects can be traced back several centuries. In the 1600s, doctors in England touted coffee as a cure for alcoholism, but some women complained that coffee was making their husbands impotent. They may have been correct, as caffeine is a diuretic and can irritate the prostate (dehydration and prostatitis can both lead to erectile dysfunction).In the late 1700s, coffeehouses began opening all over colonial America, where coffee was seen as a healthy stimulant that helped the colonists work longer hours. But by the early 1900s, public concern grew as coffee consumption was blamed for a variety of common ailments, such as nervousness, indigestion, and insomnia. In the 1970s, medical journals published studies that linked coffee consumption with high blood pressure and an increased risk of heart attacks. In 2001, a meta-study indicated that coffee was responsible for a 20% increase in risk for urinary tract cancer.But starting in 2007, to the surprise of many, meta-studies began to show positive health effects of coffee consumption. A 2007 study revealed that drinking coffee decreased the risk of liver cancer by 43%, and studies in 2011 showed that coffee reduced the risk of stroke and prostate cancer. Studies in 2012 and 2013 indicated that coffee reduced the risk of heart failure and heart disease. In 2015, CNN reported that coffee was viewed by many as "practically a health food." However, CNN also warned that given the long history of flip-flops on the health effects of coffee, medical and public opinion on coffee could easily turn negative again.Which statement is supported by the passage?
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Q4: Let's Go to the Circus
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This exam contains questions from HESI A2 Reading Comprehension Section.
This section contains questions from HESI A2 Grammar Section.
This exam contains questions from HESI A2 Vocabulary section.
This is a complete test, containing the standard HESI A2 sections.