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The New York Times has boldly declared the end of the car culture
[#permalink]
26 Dec 2024, 00:59
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The New York Times has boldly declared the end of the car culture in the United States. It based its claim on a few salient facts. The number of miles driven dropped steadily between 2005 and 2013. Over an even more extended period, rates of automobile ownership declined. The Times also charted changing attitudes toward driving and car ownership by young people, quoting one study that showed a 23-percent decrease in driving among young people. Car sharing, bikes, and public transit were among the reasons cited for this decrease. But is the automobility of American culture actually over, or is it just in the slow lane? It is true that the era of massive road building projects not only seems to be over, but also actually peaked as long ago as 1980. It is also true that environmental and social factors, as well as the overcrowding of our roads and highways, are shaping new attitudes across all segments of society. During the past two decades, public transportation use has grown at a far faster rate than the population. Another significant factor in the declining number of miles driven has to do with our aging population; over many years, the number of miles driven has been shown to decline by age 45 . Vehicle costs as a percentage of income have also been rising since the mid-90s. While all of these data do not prove the end of cars, they may point to the end of the driving boom that characterized twentieth-century America.
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Question Stats:
6% (02:17) correct
94% (01:35) wrong based on 16 sessions
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timer Statistics
Consider each answer individually and choose all that apply.
The passage suggests that the decline in driving is authenticated by which of the following?
A. A 23-percent decline in car ownership among young people B. The end of the era of massive road building projects C. The steady drop in the number of miles driven
Question 2
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21% (01:07) correct
79% (01:10) wrong based on 19 sessions
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It can be inferred from the passage that the author most likely thinks that the Times writer used the term "the end of car culture" because it
A. offered the clearest wording to contradict the phrase "automobility of American culture." B. generalized the facts about U.S. driving trends in the most succinct and appropriate way. C. created a new and appropriate catchphrase for referring to changes in driving. D. summarized a number of recent studies and elucidated their results accurately. E. reflected some current data and employed enough hyperbole to create interest.
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Question Stats:
25% (01:25) correct
75% (00:44) wrong based on 12 sessions
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In the second paragraph, the author is primarily concerned with
A. mitigating the Times's assertion that car culture is at an end. B. explaining why the number of miles driven has declined recently. C. presenting reasons for a changing demographic of car ownership. D. disputing the claim that car ownership is in significant decline. E. offering further proof for the Times's claim that the car culture is over.
The New York Times has boldly declared the end of the car culture
[#permalink]
26 Dec 2024, 04:05
Expert Reply
OFFICIAL EXPLANATION QUESTION #1
The correct answers are B and C. The passage explicitly states that the era of massive road-building projects peaked in 1980 and has been in decline since then, so choice $B$ is correct. The author also explicitly presents a steady drop in the number of miles driven in recent years, so choice C is also correct. Choice A is incorrect because the passage says that there is a 23-percent drop in driving, not car ownership, among young people.
The New York Times has boldly declared the end of the car culture
[#permalink]
26 Dec 2024, 04:06
Expert Reply
OFFICIAL EXPLANATION QUESTION #2
The correct answer is E.The author's contention is most likely that car culture isn't over, but rather that the twentieth-century boom in driving is over. Nevertheless, the author is not discrediting the Times's facts; instead, the author is suggesting that the conclusions drawn from them are overblown. The reader might also infer that a dramatic phrase such as "the end of car culture" was meant to attract attention. Choice A is incorrect because nothing in the passage suggests or implies it. Choice B could be true, but does not explain the sensational phrase "end of the car culture." Choice C is not supported by passage facts. Choice D is tempting because the data presented by the Times sounds reasonable enough, but it is incorrect because such data do not justify the term "end of the car culture."
Re: The New York Times has boldly declared the end of the car culture
[#permalink]
26 Dec 2024, 04:07
Expert Reply
OFFICIAL EXPLANATION QUESTION #3
The author begins the paragraph with a question and ends it with an assertion about the end of the twentieth-century boom in driving, rather than the end of the car culture. In between, the author offers many facts about the decline, rather than the end, of the automobile. Choices $\mathrm{B}, \mathrm{C}$, and D are all incorrect because the paragraph does not elucidate any single point presented by the Times. Instead, it offers new facts about the decline of the automobile. Choice E is tempting because the paragraph does offer further proof; nevertheless, all the proof it offers is bracketed by sentences that suggest that the Times's conclusion about the end of the automobile needs to be mitigated, moderated, or softened.
gmatclubot
Re: The New York Times has boldly declared the end of the car culture [#permalink]