GRE Verbal : Summarizing and Describing Passage Content in Single-Answer Questions

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for GRE Verbal

varsity tutors app store varsity tutors android store varsity tutors amazon store varsity tutors ibooks store

Example Questions

1 2 4 Next →

Example Question #31 : Meaning And Structure In Single Answer Questions

"History and Myth" by Will Floyd

Popular ideas about historical characters are often quite fallacious. In reality, Napoleon Bonaparte was not short, but a perfectly average size for his time. Paul Revere did not make a solo midnight ride to warn the colonial militia that the British were coming. Such a dearth of information exists about the lives of figures like Robin Hood, Johnny Appleseed, and John Henry that scholars wonder if they even existed. Despite scholarly concern and arguments, these popular characters and myths continue to form a large part of the common historical imagination.

Recently, some historians have begun to study these myths and legends. No matter how whimsical or ungrounded such stories are, these legends hold a key to how people interpret history. Colleagues seeking to rebut such studies have derided those scholars who are analyzing myths. The more skeptical historians accuse the historians who analyze myths and legends as promoting conspiracy theories and providing cover to people with fringe beliefs. In response, the scholars studying the apocryphal stories claim that they are actually helping to dispel such marginal ideas. By understanding why odd stories and fables get constructed, these new historians think that they can better pursue their goal of understanding the past in order to better navigate the future. They also think that understanding how fallacious myths and legends develop may help fewer to arise in the first place.

The main idea of the passage is that __________.

Possible Answers:

many historians are researching the myths and legends surrounding historical figures

historians do not actually have a great grasp on the facts surrounding most historical events

certain historians are helping to promote conspiracy theories with their scholarship

historians fight about the historical truth of many popular assumptions

history is a remarkably complex subject that very few people know much about

Correct answer:

many historians are researching the myths and legends surrounding historical figures

Explanation:

The passage is based on the foundation that many "popular ideas" are in fact wrong, but both camps of historians understand this, and are merely arguing about the value of these myths. The author mostly discusses the historians who are actually studying these myths, and the response to their research.

Example Question #31 : Summarizing And Describing Passage Content In Single Answer Questions

"Idioms and Rhyming Slang" by Will Floyd

While dialects and slang exist in most corners of the world, a few peculiar language habits stand out as developing entirely new ways of speaking. Most famously, the rhyming Cockney slang of East London that developed in the late nineteenth century has created many different idioms. The process of creating rhyming slang appears quite simple. A common word gets replaced by a phrase whose terminal syllable rhymes with the word. Thus, “wife” would become “trouble and strife,” except rhyming slang quite frequently does not stop there. Remarkably, the rhyming component of the phrase is often dropped altogether, so that wife is actually just “trouble.” Other notable examples are “stairs” becoming “apples,” from “apples and pears,” and “bottle” becoming “aris,” shortened from “Aristotle.”

Obviously, this can lead to quite a bit of confusion to a person unfamiliar with rhyming slang, or someone who does not know the full rhymes. This problem is exacerbated by the fluidity of rhyming slang. Celebrities and politicians can often lend their names to new forms, and “Britney Spears” has become a term for “beers” in recent years. This confusion may actually have been an intentional aspect of rhyming slang. Theories abound about the origin of rhyming slang, with the one constant being a form of deception by the people using the slang, with the language of shady shopkeepers or the doubletalk of thieves as the most commonly cited examples. No matter the origin, rhyming Cockney slang is a true innovation on the English language.

The author's argument is best summarized as __________.

Possible Answers:

the worst way to invent new phrases is to rely on the use of rhymes

rhyming Cockney slang is only used by thieves and crooks

London has never developed any truly interesting dialects

rhyming Cockney slang is a silly diversion not worthy of attention

rhyming Cockney slang provides an interesting example of linguistic innovation

Correct answer:

rhyming Cockney slang provides an interesting example of linguistic innovation

Explanation:

The description of rhyming Cockney slang by the author details its "shady" origins, use among lower classes, and its confusing nature. Nonetheless, the author describes it as a "true innovation," and further praises its inventiveness. This means the author is trying to show its particular effectiveness.

1 2 4 Next →

Tired of practice problems?

Try live online GRE prep today.

1-on-1 Tutoring
Live Online Class
1-on-1 + Class
Learning Tools by Varsity Tutors