Mini TO UTUL UGM 17 Bahasa Inggris [Soal Asli]

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Mini TO UTUL UGM 17 Bahasa Inggris [Soal Asli]

Anda punya waktu 20 menit untuk mengerjakan 20 soal. Kerjakan dengan jujur sebab ini bahan evaluasi kalian. Anda punya kesempatan tiga kali pengerjaan.Kerjakan di laptop atau tablet agar lebih optimal secara tampilan. Kalian yang mau gabung bimbel UTUL UGM 2026 boleh banget! Kalian bisa klik di sini

The number of attempts remaining is 6

Isi dulu data diri yaah

1 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 41-50):
Climate change is not just bad for the planet and for our bodies. According to a new report, climate change is bad for our mental health too. The report is not the first to tackle climate change from a health perspective. Earlier this year a Consortium on Climate and Health issued a report detailing the many ways climate change can negatively impact human health and wellbeing. What makes this new report unique is its narrow focus on mental health.

The report breaks up the mental health impacts into two broad buckets: acute impacts such as those from discrete climate related shocks (like fires, floods, and storms) and chronic impacts, or the more gradual ways that climate change can impact our wellbeing.

It is important that we recognize that up forty percent of people who live through a disaster experience some kind of psychopathology. This includes anxiety, depression, mode disorders, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). According to the report, one in six people who lived in areas affected by Hurricane Katrina met the criteria PTSD. Similarly, suicide and suicidal ideation more than doubled in those regions, and 49 percent of people developed an anxiety or mood disorder like depression.

The issue is not just disaster itself—most of us can cope with a single source of stress. But in disaster situations, stressors multiply rapidly. You may have lost not just your home, but your job, and perhaps even the broader community that you ordinarily relied on for support. And under the climate change scenarios, it could mean that you are extirpated from your home permanently.

Chronic effects are harder to envision, but no less dangerous. As the climate continues to change, for example, many locations will be warmer for longer portions of the year—anyone who has experienced this unusually warm winter knows this firsthand. But if the weather gets too sticky, we tend to retreat indoors, making it harder (even in this digital age) to build and maintain much needed social networks. Similarly, as temperatures soar, studies suggest our tempers do as well, which can further threaten community cohesiveness.

(Adapted from http://www.popsci.com/climate-change-mental-illness)

41. What is the topic of the text?

2 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 41-50):
Climate change is not just bad for the planet and for our bodies. According to a new report, climate change is bad for our mental health too. The report is not the first to tackle climate change from a health perspective. Earlier this year a Consortium on Climate and Health issued a report detailing the many ways climate change can negatively impact human health and wellbeing. What makes this new report unique is its narrow focus on mental health.

The report breaks up the mental health impacts into two broad buckets: acute impacts such as those from discrete climate related shocks (like fires, floods, and storms) and chronic impacts, or the more gradual ways that climate change can impact our wellbeing.

It is important that we recognize that up forty percent of people who live through a disaster experience some kind of psychopathology. This includes anxiety, depression, mode disorders, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). According to the report, one in six people who lived in areas affected by Hurricane Katrina met the criteria PTSD. Similarly, suicide and suicidal ideation more than doubled in those regions, and 49 percent of people developed an anxiety or mood disorder like depression.

The issue is not just disaster itself—most of us can cope with a single source of stress. But in disaster situations, stressors multiply rapidly. You may have lost not just your home, but your job, and perhaps even the broader community that you ordinarily relied on for support. And under the climate change scenarios, it could mean that you are extirpated from your home permanently.

Chronic effects are harder to envision, but no less dangerous. As the climate continues to change, for example, many locations will be warmer for longer portions of the year—anyone who has experienced this unusually warm winter knows this firsthand. But if the weather gets too sticky, we tend to retreat indoors, making it harder (even in this digital age) to build and maintain much needed social networks. Similarly, as temperatures soar, studies suggest our tempers do as well, which can further threaten community cohesiveness.

(Adapted from http://www.popsci.com/climate-change-mental-illness)

42. The text mentions all of the following psychological problem EXCEPT

3 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 41-50):
Climate change is not just bad for the planet and for our bodies. According to a new report, climate change is bad for our mental health too. The report is not the first to tackle climate change from a health perspective. Earlier this year a Consortium on Climate and Health issued a report detailing the many ways climate change can negatively impact human health and wellbeing. What makes this new report unique is its narrow focus on mental health.

The report breaks up the mental health impacts into two broad buckets: acute impacts such as those from discrete climate related shocks (like fires, floods, and storms) and chronic impacts, or the more gradual ways that climate change can impact our wellbeing.

It is important that we recognize that up forty percent of people who live through a disaster experience some kind of psychopathology. This includes anxiety, depression, mode disorders, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). According to the report, one in six people who lived in areas affected by Hurricane Katrina met the criteria PTSD. Similarly, suicide and suicidal ideation more than doubled in those regions, and 49 percent of people developed an anxiety or mood disorder like depression.

The issue is not just disaster itself—most of us can cope with a single source of stress. But in disaster situations, stressors multiply rapidly. You may have lost not just your home, but your job, and perhaps even the broader community that you ordinarily relied on for support. And under the climate change scenarios, it could mean that you are extirpated from your home permanently.

Chronic effects are harder to envision, but no less dangerous. As the climate continues to change, for example, many locations will be warmer for longer portions of the year—anyone who has experienced this unusually warm winter knows this firsthand. But if the weather gets too sticky, we tend to retreat indoors, making it harder (even in this digital age) to build and maintain much needed social networks. Similarly, as temperatures soar, studies suggest our tempers do as well, which can further threaten community cohesiveness.

(Adapted from http://www.popsci.com/climate-change-mental-illness)

43. The word “this” in line 9 refers to

4 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 41-50):
Climate change is not just bad for the planet and for our bodies. According to a new report, climate change is bad for our mental health too. The report is not the first to tackle climate change from a health perspective. Earlier this year a Consortium on Climate and Health issued a report detailing the many ways climate change can negatively impact human health and wellbeing. What makes this new report unique is its narrow focus on mental health.

The report breaks up the mental health impacts into two broad buckets: acute impacts such as those from discrete climate related shocks (like fires, floods, and storms) and chronic impacts, or the more gradual ways that climate change can impact our wellbeing.

It is important that we recognize that up forty percent of people who live through a disaster experience some kind of psychopathology. This includes anxiety, depression, mode disorders, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). According to the report, one in six people who lived in areas affected by Hurricane Katrina met the criteria PTSD. Similarly, suicide and suicidal ideation more than doubled in those regions, and 49 percent of people developed an anxiety or mood disorder like depression.

The issue is not just disaster itself—most of us can cope with a single source of stress. But in disaster situations, stressors multiply rapidly. You may have lost not just your home, but your job, and perhaps even the broader community that you ordinarily relied on for support. And under the climate change scenarios, it could mean that you are extirpated from your home permanently.

Chronic effects are harder to envision, but no less dangerous. As the climate continues to change, for example, many locations will be warmer for longer portions of the year—anyone who has experienced this unusually warm winter knows this firsthand. But if the weather gets too sticky, we tend to retreat indoors, making it harder (even in this digital age) to build and maintain much needed social networks. Similarly, as temperatures soar, studies suggest our tempers do as well, which can further threaten community cohesiveness.

(Adapted from http://www.popsci.com/climate-change-mental-illness)

44. Which of the following is TRUE according to the text?

5 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 41-50):
Climate change is not just bad for the planet and for our bodies. According to a new report, climate change is bad for our mental health too. The report is not the first to tackle climate change from a health perspective. Earlier this year a Consortium on Climate and Health issued a report detailing the many ways climate change can negatively impact human health and wellbeing. What makes this new report unique is its narrow focus on mental health.

The report breaks up the mental health impacts into two broad buckets: acute impacts such as those from discrete climate related shocks (like fires, floods, and storms) and chronic impacts, or the more gradual ways that climate change can impact our wellbeing.

It is important that we recognize that up forty percent of people who live through a disaster experience some kind of psychopathology. This includes anxiety, depression, mode disorders, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). According to the report, one in six people who lived in areas affected by Hurricane Katrina met the criteria PTSD. Similarly, suicide and suicidal ideation more than doubled in those regions, and 49 percent of people developed an anxiety or mood disorder like depression.

The issue is not just disaster itself—most of us can cope with a single source of stress. But in disaster situations, stressors multiply rapidly. You may have lost not just your home, but your job, and perhaps even the broader community that you ordinarily relied on for support. And under the climate change scenarios, it could mean that you are extirpated from your home permanently.

Chronic effects are harder to envision, but no less dangerous. As the climate continues to change, for example, many locations will be warmer for longer portions of the year—anyone who has experienced this unusually warm winter knows this firsthand. But if the weather gets too sticky, we tend to retreat indoors, making it harder (even in this digital age) to build and maintain much needed social networks. Similarly, as temperatures soar, studies suggest our tempers do as well, which can further threaten community cohesiveness.

(Adapted from http://www.popsci.com/climate-change-mental-illness)

45. It can be inferred from the text that

6 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 41-50):
Climate change is not just bad for the planet and for our bodies. According to a new report, climate change is bad for our mental health too. The report is not the first to tackle climate change from a health perspective. Earlier this year a Consortium on Climate and Health issued a report detailing the many ways climate change can negatively impact human health and wellbeing. What makes this new report unique is its narrow focus on mental health.

The report breaks up the mental health impacts into two broad buckets: acute impacts such as those from discrete climate related shocks (like fires, floods, and storms) and chronic impacts, or the more gradual ways that climate change can impact our wellbeing.

It is important that we recognize that up forty percent of people who live through a disaster experience some kind of psychopathology. This includes anxiety, depression, mode disorders, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). According to the report, one in six people who lived in areas affected by Hurricane Katrina met the criteria PTSD. Similarly, suicide and suicidal ideation more than doubled in those regions, and 49 percent of people developed an anxiety or mood disorder like depression.

The issue is not just disaster itself—most of us can cope with a single source of stress. But in disaster situations, stressors multiply rapidly. You may have lost not just your home, but your job, and perhaps even the broader community that you ordinarily relied on for support. And under the climate change scenarios, it could mean that you are extirpated from your home permanently.

Chronic effects are harder to envision, but no less dangerous. As the climate continues to change, for example, many locations will be warmer for longer portions of the year—anyone who has experienced this unusually warm winter knows this firsthand. But if the weather gets too sticky, we tend to retreat indoors, making it harder (even in this digital age) to build and maintain much needed social networks. Similarly, as temperatures soar, studies suggest our tempers do as well, which can further threaten community cohesiveness.

(Adapted from http://www.popsci.com/climate-change-mental-illness)

46. Where in the text does the author mention examples of sources of stress in disaster situations?

7 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 41-50):
Climate change is not just bad for the planet and for our bodies. According to a new report, climate change is bad for our mental health too. The report is not the first to tackle climate change from a health perspective. Earlier this year a Consortium on Climate and Health issued a report detailing the many ways climate change can negatively impact human health and wellbeing. What makes this new report unique is its narrow focus on mental health.

The report breaks up the mental health impacts into two broad buckets: acute impacts such as those from discrete climate related shocks (like fires, floods, and storms) and chronic impacts, or the more gradual ways that climate change can impact our wellbeing.

It is important that we recognize that up forty percent of people who live through a disaster experience some kind of psychopathology. This includes anxiety, depression, mode disorders, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). According to the report, one in six people who lived in areas affected by Hurricane Katrina met the criteria PTSD. Similarly, suicide and suicidal ideation more than doubled in those regions, and 49 percent of people developed an anxiety or mood disorder like depression.

The issue is not just disaster itself—most of us can cope with a single source of stress. But in disaster situations, stressors multiply rapidly. You may have lost not just your home, but your job, and perhaps even the broader community that you ordinarily relied on for support. And under the climate change scenarios, it could mean that you are extirpated from your home permanently.

Chronic effects are harder to envision, but no less dangerous. As the climate continues to change, for example, many locations will be warmer for longer portions of the year—anyone who has experienced this unusually warm winter knows this firsthand. But if the weather gets too sticky, we tend to retreat indoors, making it harder (even in this digital age) to build and maintain much needed social networks. Similarly, as temperatures soar, studies suggest our tempers do as well, which can further threaten community cohesiveness.

(Adapted from http://www.popsci.com/climate-change-mental-illness)

47. The word “envision” in line 17 is closest in meaning to

8 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 41-50):
Climate change is not just bad for the planet and for our bodies. According to a new report, climate change is bad for our mental health too. The report is not the first to tackle climate change from a health perspective. Earlier this year a Consortium on Climate and Health issued a report detailing the many ways climate change can negatively impact human health and wellbeing. What makes this new report unique is its narrow focus on mental health.

The report breaks up the mental health impacts into two broad buckets: acute impacts such as those from discrete climate related shocks (like fires, floods, and storms) and chronic impacts, or the more gradual ways that climate change can impact our wellbeing.

It is important that we recognize that up forty percent of people who live through a disaster experience some kind of psychopathology. This includes anxiety, depression, mode disorders, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). According to the report, one in six people who lived in areas affected by Hurricane Katrina met the criteria PTSD. Similarly, suicide and suicidal ideation more than doubled in those regions, and 49 percent of people developed an anxiety or mood disorder like depression.

The issue is not just disaster itself—most of us can cope with a single source of stress. But in disaster situations, stressors multiply rapidly. You may have lost not just your home, but your job, and perhaps even the broader community that you ordinarily relied on for support. And under the climate change scenarios, it could mean that you are extirpated from your home permanently.

Chronic effects are harder to envision, but no less dangerous. As the climate continues to change, for example, many locations will be warmer for longer portions of the year—anyone who has experienced this unusually warm winter knows this firsthand. But if the weather gets too sticky, we tend to retreat indoors, making it harder (even in this digital age) to build and maintain much needed social networks. Similarly, as temperatures soar, studies suggest our tempers do as well, which can further threaten community cohesiveness.

(Adapted from http://www.popsci.com/climate-change-mental-illness)

48. It is implied in the text that in a hot and damp weather, people have tendency to

9 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 41-50):
Climate change is not just bad for the planet and for our bodies. According to a new report, climate change is bad for our mental health too. The report is not the first to tackle climate change from a health perspective. Earlier this year a Consortium on Climate and Health issued a report detailing the many ways climate change can negatively impact human health and wellbeing. What makes this new report unique is its narrow focus on mental health.

The report breaks up the mental health impacts into two broad buckets: acute impacts such as those from discrete climate related shocks (like fires, floods, and storms) and chronic impacts, or the more gradual ways that climate change can impact our wellbeing.

It is important that we recognize that up forty percent of people who live through a disaster experience some kind of psychopathology. This includes anxiety, depression, mode disorders, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). According to the report, one in six people who lived in areas affected by Hurricane Katrina met the criteria PTSD. Similarly, suicide and suicidal ideation more than doubled in those regions, and 49 percent of people developed an anxiety or mood disorder like depression.

The issue is not just disaster itself—most of us can cope with a single source of stress. But in disaster situations, stressors multiply rapidly. You may have lost not just your home, but your job, and perhaps even the broader community that you ordinarily relied on for support. And under the climate change scenarios, it could mean that you are extirpated from your home permanently.

Chronic effects are harder to envision, but no less dangerous. As the climate continues to change, for example, many locations will be warmer for longer portions of the year—anyone who has experienced this unusually warm winter knows this firsthand. But if the weather gets too sticky, we tend to retreat indoors, making it harder (even in this digital age) to build and maintain much needed social networks. Similarly, as temperatures soar, studies suggest our tempers do as well, which can further threaten community cohesiveness.

(Adapted from http://www.popsci.com/climate-change-mental-illness)

49. Which of the following best describes the organization of the text?

10 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 41-50):
Climate change is not just bad for the planet and for our bodies. According to a new report, climate change is bad for our mental health too. The report is not the first to tackle climate change from a health perspective. Earlier this year a Consortium on Climate and Health issued a report detailing the many ways climate change can negatively impact human health and wellbeing. What makes this new report unique is its narrow focus on mental health.

The report breaks up the mental health impacts into two broad buckets: acute impacts such as those from discrete climate related shocks (like fires, floods, and storms) and chronic impacts, or the more gradual ways that climate change can impact our wellbeing.

It is important that we recognize that up forty percent of people who live through a disaster experience some kind of psychopathology. This includes anxiety, depression, mode disorders, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). According to the report, one in six people who lived in areas affected by Hurricane Katrina met the criteria PTSD. Similarly, suicide and suicidal ideation more than doubled in those regions, and 49 percent of people developed an anxiety or mood disorder like depression.

The issue is not just disaster itself—most of us can cope with a single source of stress. But in disaster situations, stressors multiply rapidly. You may have lost not just your home, but your job, and perhaps even the broader community that you ordinarily relied on for support. And under the climate change scenarios, it could mean that you are extirpated from your home permanently.

Chronic effects are harder to envision, but no less dangerous. As the climate continues to change, for example, many locations will be warmer for longer portions of the year—anyone who has experienced this unusually warm winter knows this firsthand. But if the weather gets too sticky, we tend to retreat indoors, making it harder (even in this digital age) to build and maintain much needed social networks. Similarly, as temperatures soar, studies suggest our tempers do as well, which can further threaten community cohesiveness.

(Adapted from http://www.popsci.com/climate-change-mental-illness)

50. The purpose of the text is to

11 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 51-60):
New research conducted by Dr. Stephens investigates a link between swearing fluency and emotion. The findings show that there is a direct (51) _____ between swearing and emotional arousal. (52) _____ this may seem obvious, this research confirms such a link (53) _____. The finding cast new light on opinions (54) _____ swearing may be considered to be a (55) _____ of expressing emotion.

In an article (56) _____ in The Conversation Dr. Stephens said that he and his team appear to (57) _____ a two-way relation between swearing and emotion. (58) _____ can swearing provoke an (59) _____, as shown in his previous research on swearing and pain, but raised emotional arousal has been showing to facilitate swearing, or (60) _____ one aspect of it, swearing fluency.

(Adapted from https://www.nationalgeographic.com)

51. Choose the word that best completes blank (51) in the passage.

12 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 51-60):
New research conducted by Dr. Stephens investigates a link between swearing fluency and emotion. The findings show that there is a direct (51) _____ between swearing and emotional arousal. (52) _____ this may seem obvious, this research confirms such a link (53) _____. The finding cast new light on opinions (54) _____ swearing may be considered to be a (55) _____ of expressing emotion.

In an article (56) _____ in The Conversation Dr. Stephens said that he and his team appear to (57) _____ a two-way relation between swearing and emotion. (58) _____ can swearing provoke an (59) _____, as shown in his previous research on swearing and pain, but raised emotional arousal has been showing to facilitate swearing, or (60) _____ one aspect of it, swearing fluency.

(Adapted from https://www.nationalgeographic.com)

52. Choose the word that best completes blank (52) in the passage.

13 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 51-60):
New research conducted by Dr. Stephens investigates a link between swearing fluency and emotion. The findings show that there is a direct (51) _____ between swearing and emotional arousal. (52) _____ this may seem obvious, this research confirms such a link (53) _____. The finding cast new light on opinions (54) _____ swearing may be considered to be a (55) _____ of expressing emotion.

In an article (56) _____ in The Conversation Dr. Stephens said that he and his team appear to (57) _____ a two-way relation between swearing and emotion. (58) _____ can swearing provoke an (59) _____, as shown in his previous research on swearing and pain, but raised emotional arousal has been showing to facilitate swearing, or (60) _____ one aspect of it, swearing fluency.

(Adapted from https://www.nationalgeographic.com)

53. Choose the word that best completes blank (53) in the passage.

14 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 51-60):
New research conducted by Dr. Stephens investigates a link between swearing fluency and emotion. The findings show that there is a direct (51) _____ between swearing and emotional arousal. (52) _____ this may seem obvious, this research confirms such a link (53) _____. The finding cast new light on opinions (54) _____ swearing may be considered to be a (55) _____ of expressing emotion.

In an article (56) _____ in The Conversation Dr. Stephens said that he and his team appear to (57) _____ a two-way relation between swearing and emotion. (58) _____ can swearing provoke an (59) _____, as shown in his previous research on swearing and pain, but raised emotional arousal has been showing to facilitate swearing, or (60) _____ one aspect of it, swearing fluency.

(Adapted from https://www.nationalgeographic.com)

54. Choose the word that best completes blank (54) in the passage.

15 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 51-60):
New research conducted by Dr. Stephens investigates a link between swearing fluency and emotion. The findings show that there is a direct (51) _____ between swearing and emotional arousal. (52) _____ this may seem obvious, this research confirms such a link (53) _____. The finding cast new light on opinions (54) _____ swearing may be considered to be a (55) _____ of expressing emotion.

In an article (56) _____ in The Conversation Dr. Stephens said that he and his team appear to (57) _____ a two-way relation between swearing and emotion. (58) _____ can swearing provoke an (59) _____, as shown in his previous research on swearing and pain, but raised emotional arousal has been showing to facilitate swearing, or (60) _____ one aspect of it, swearing fluency.

(Adapted from https://www.nationalgeographic.com)

55. Choose the word that best completes blank (55) in the passage.

16 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 51-60):
New research conducted by Dr. Stephens investigates a link between swearing fluency and emotion. The findings show that there is a direct (51) _____ between swearing and emotional arousal. (52) _____ this may seem obvious, this research confirms such a link (53) _____. The finding cast new light on opinions (54) _____ swearing may be considered to be a (55) _____ of expressing emotion.

In an article (56) _____ in The Conversation Dr. Stephens said that he and his team appear to (57) _____ a two-way relation between swearing and emotion. (58) _____ can swearing provoke an (59) _____, as shown in his previous research on swearing and pain, but raised emotional arousal has been showing to facilitate swearing, or (60) _____ one aspect of it, swearing fluency.

(Adapted from https://www.nationalgeographic.com)

56. Choose the word that best completes blank (56) in the passage.

17 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 51-60):
New research conducted by Dr. Stephens investigates a link between swearing fluency and emotion. The findings show that there is a direct (51) _____ between swearing and emotional arousal. (52) _____ this may seem obvious, this research confirms such a link (53) _____. The finding cast new light on opinions (54) _____ swearing may be considered to be a (55) _____ of expressing emotion.

In an article (56) _____ in The Conversation Dr. Stephens said that he and his team appear to (57) _____ a two-way relation between swearing and emotion. (58) _____ can swearing provoke an (59) _____, as shown in his previous research on swearing and pain, but raised emotional arousal has been showing to facilitate swearing, or (60) _____ one aspect of it, swearing fluency.

(Adapted from https://www.nationalgeographic.com)

57. Choose the word that best completes blank (57) in the passage.

18 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 51-60):
New research conducted by Dr. Stephens investigates a link between swearing fluency and emotion. The findings show that there is a direct (51) _____ between swearing and emotional arousal. (52) _____ this may seem obvious, this research confirms such a link (53) _____. The finding cast new light on opinions (54) _____ swearing may be considered to be a (55) _____ of expressing emotion.

In an article (56) _____ in The Conversation Dr. Stephens said that he and his team appear to (57) _____ a two-way relation between swearing and emotion. (58) _____ can swearing provoke an (59) _____, as shown in his previous research on swearing and pain, but raised emotional arousal has been showing to facilitate swearing, or (60) _____ one aspect of it, swearing fluency.

(Adapted from https://www.nationalgeographic.com)

58. Choose the word that best completes blank (58) in the passage.

19 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 51-60):
New research conducted by Dr. Stephens investigates a link between swearing fluency and emotion. The findings show that there is a direct (51) _____ between swearing and emotional arousal. (52) _____ this may seem obvious, this research confirms such a link (53) _____. The finding cast new light on opinions (54) _____ swearing may be considered to be a (55) _____ of expressing emotion.

In an article (56) _____ in The Conversation Dr. Stephens said that he and his team appear to (57) _____ a two-way relation between swearing and emotion. (58) _____ can swearing provoke an (59) _____, as shown in his previous research on swearing and pain, but raised emotional arousal has been showing to facilitate swearing, or (60) _____ one aspect of it, swearing fluency.

(Adapted from https://www.nationalgeographic.com)

59. Choose the word that best completes blank (59) in the passage.

20 / 20

PASSAGE (Soal 51-60):
New research conducted by Dr. Stephens investigates a link between swearing fluency and emotion. The findings show that there is a direct (51) _____ between swearing and emotional arousal. (52) _____ this may seem obvious, this research confirms such a link (53) _____. The finding cast new light on opinions (54) _____ swearing may be considered to be a (55) _____ of expressing emotion.

In an article (56) _____ in The Conversation Dr. Stephens said that he and his team appear to (57) _____ a two-way relation between swearing and emotion. (58) _____ can swearing provoke an (59) _____, as shown in his previous research on swearing and pain, but raised emotional arousal has been showing to facilitate swearing, or (60) _____ one aspect of it, swearing fluency.

(Adapted from https://www.nationalgeographic.com)

60. Choose the word that best completes blank (60) in the passage.

Your score is

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