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2 Question 7. A. Nevertheless B. Accordingly C. Meanwhile D. Conversely Question 8. A. with B. in C. of D. for Question 9. A. many B. several C. each D. much Question 10. A. elastic healthy arteries B. healthy elastic arteries C. arterial elastic healthy D. healthy arteries elastic Question 11. A. salutary B. derisive C. refractory D. noxious Question 12. A. uptake B. intake C. upturn D. uptick Mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the best arrangement of utterances or sentences to make a meaningful exchange or text in each of the following questions from 13 to 17. Question 13. a. We submit this memorandum as metropolitan budgets tilt toward prestige transit corridors that, by design, siphon taxes from shrinking towns. b. The pattern, long masked by GDP aggregates, now appears in commuter flows and land rents that metropolitan authorities quietly recalibrated in the last decade. c. Accordingly, we propose a compensatory levy on megacity surpluses to fund intermunicipal equalisation and restore democratic parity. d. Unless rural councils are enfranchised in revenue negotiations, representation becomes ornamental where the money never returns. e. Evidence shows that “winner cities” consolidate lobbying power, making provincial ballots less capable of steering national priorities. (Adapted from The Guardian, “How Europe’s cities ‘stole’ the continent’s wealth”) A. a – b – e – d – c B. b – a – e – c – d C. a – e – b – d – c D. e – b – a – d – c Question 14. a. Advocate: If turnout skews toward centrally connected districts, pilots entrench the bias they claim to remedy; therefore ballotlinked budgeting must weight peripheral wards. b. Planner: Precisely; when metropolitan clout overwhelms national chambers, who speaks for deindustrialised regions too dispersed to convene? c. Advocate: And yet, without corridorspecific vetoes, megaprojects will proceed as fait accompli, which further hollows local deliberation. (Adapted from The Guardian, “How Europe’s cities ‘stole’ the continent’s wealth”) A. a – b – c B. c – a – b C. b – c – a D. c – b – a Question 15. a. Researcher: Adolescents report a dread that the future is foreclosed; nonetheless, calibrated exposure to credible progress stories arrests spirals of catastrophic thinking. b. Parent: Then schools should routinise “efficacy drills” that pair climate literacy with doable civic tasks, rather than doomscrolling assemblies. c. Researcher: Exactly – our longitudinal cohort shows that agency cues, delivered intermittently, keep arousal adaptive while avoiding learned helplessness. d. Parent: I can see that; constant alarm exhausts attention, but constant reassurance infantilises – what matters is difficulty that can be met. e. Researcher: We also randomised feedback framing so that effort, not innate virtue, is credited when teens engage in mitigation projects. (Adapted from Nature, “The rise of ecoanxiety: how to spot it and what to do about it”) A. e – d – b – c – a B. a – d – c – b – e C. a – b – d – c – e D. e – b – d – c – a Question 16. a. The current wellbeing newsletter amplifies hazard without scaffolding response, which leaves anxious students marooned between headlines and action. b. To remedy this, our office proposes a sequenced programme – diagnose, codesign, iterate – that embeds peer mentoring and consults clinicians on dosing alerts. c. Governance will require an ethics addendum, periodic audits, and optout channels for those who should not receive exposure prompts. d. We therefore request approval to pilot a mixedmethods evaluation tracking rumination, attendance, and prosocial uptake across campuses.

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