All HSPT Verbal Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #2 : Antonyms: Nouns For Abstract Concepts
An antonym of "loyalty" is __________.
reconnaissance
fidelity
scalawag
treachery
rebel
treachery
The word "loyalty" is quite easy and well known. Do not, of course, answer "fidelity," for this is a synonym—which we are not looking for at all! The word "rebel" and "scalawag" both describe people who are not very loyal. However, we are looking for a word that is an abstract concept that is opposed to loyalty. To be treacherous is to be someone who betrays the trust that someone else puts in him or her. This is the opposite of being loyal; hence, this is an excellent option for an antonym.
Example Question #3 : Antonyms: Nouns For Abstract Concepts
An antonym of "immortality" is __________.
morality
divinity
transience
decadence
uprightness
transience
First of all, note well that the word is "immortality," not "immorality"! This mistake could lead you to pick one of the wrong answers, especially the seemingly simple "morality" but also "uprightness." An "immortal" thing is one that is undying. Often, we will use this to speak of divinities—immortal gods. It can also refer to ideas that are unchanging or undying. Thus, in contrast to this, transient things are ones that are passing. Transience describes the state of being passing in such a manner.
Example Question #4 : Antonyms: Nouns For Abstract Concepts
"Abasement" is the opposite of __________.
humiliation
fort
honor
dungeon
creation
honor
"Abasement" means humiliation or degradation. You might abase a fellow student by bullying them. The opposite meaning would be to "honor" someone. "Humiliation" is a synonym of abasement, not an antonym. Although "abasement" sounds like the word "basement," they do not have similar meanings, so "dungeon" and "fort" should be eliminated. "Creation" is also not an antonym of "abasement."
Example Question #1 : Antonyms: Verbs
An antonym of "dispute" is __________.
question
posit
forbear
recognize
disagree
recognize
When two people dispute something, they do not agree on the topic. If we isolate one of those people, he or she might say, "I dispute your claim that (e.g.) the Middle Ages are underappreciated." This means that the person does not believe the claim about the importance of the Middle Ages. In general, dispute can mean either to argue about or (as we now see) to question the truth or validity of an assertion. In contrast to such doubt or questioning, one could accept or recognize a fact as being true.
Example Question #571 : Hspt Verbal Skills
An antonym of "ponder" is __________.
disregard
consider
scrutinize
observe
remark
disregard
None of the options provided here are great antonyms, but we can definitely remove bad candidates and find an answer that is good enough for our purposes. The word "ponder" means to think about deeply. To "scrutinize" something is to pay attention to its details, and to "observe" and "consider" are both options that at least note consideration of an object. Of course, observation and consideration are rather uninvolved in contrast to pondering. In another question, they might be options for correct answers. However, we have the option "disregard." This is more opposed to pondering than "observe" and "consider." Since "remark" is really not useful at all for our purposes, the answer must be "disregard."
Example Question #572 : Hspt Verbal Skills
An antonym of "illuminate" is __________.
question
complicate
dissociate
adjudicate
disinterest
complicate
The word "illuminate" is most often associated with its literal, physical notion—the phenomenon of light that illuminates a given surface. However, there are no words here that are directly related to such physical light. The word "illuminate" can be used to describe intellectual endeavors, when one thing "sheds light" on another—that is, makes the other thing clearer. In contrast to such illumination, there is the phenomenon of an overly complicated argument. When someone complicates a matter, he or she makes it less clear.
Example Question #4 : Antonyms: Verbs
An antonym of "recollect" is __________.
retain
disabuse
reminisce
omit
commemorate
omit
A set of "recollections" is a group of memories that have been gathered together. (Yes, the word is a bit like saying "re+collecting" as in "collecting together again.") When we recollect something, we attempt to bring back and report such a memory. If we do not call back such a thought, we then would omit it from such recollection. "Reminisce" and even "commemorate" are both rather synonymous, while "disabuse" and "retain" are neither synonyms nor antonyms for our purposes. Therefore, "omit" is the best option among those provided for an antonym.
Example Question #573 : Hspt Verbal Skills
An antonym of "recant" is __________.
misrepresent
assume
undertake
detract
decant
assume
When someone recants something, he or she "gives back" something that he or she held to be true. Generally, it is a question of recanting an opinion or a statement. For instance, we might say, "Thomas refused to recant his belief in Aristotle's writings, for he believed the Greek thinker to have spoken the truth." Thomas refuses to say that he no longer believes in the truthfulness of Aristotle. In contrast to such recanting, one can "assume" something by taking it up. Often this has the sense of "assuming an identity" or "assuming an uncertain fact to be true." The general point is that "assuming" means to take up as opposed to "recanting" which means something like to let go or give up.
Example Question #574 : Hspt Verbal Skills
An antonym of "exculpate" is __________.
absolve
defame
detest
pardon
incriminate
incriminate
When someone is culpable, he or she is guilty of something. Evidence or arguments that are "exculpatory" are ones that help to show the innocence of a person. They take away the guilt—"ex" (away) + "cuplate" (guilt / fault). The options "pardon" and "absolve" are both relative synonyms for this. To "defame" someone is to ruin his or her reputation. If there were no other options, this might pass for a distant antonym option; however, the best antonym option is "incriminate," which literally means to make into a criminal, or, by a more standard definition, to make someone seem guilty.
Example Question #91 : Antonyms
Select the answer choice that is closest in meaning to the word in capital letters.
OBFUSCATE
Plaudit
Enigma
Simplify
Stubborn
Headstrong
Simplify
"Obfuscate" is a verb which means to make unclear; to confuse or bewilder. "Simplify" is a verb which means to make clear. This is the exact opposite of "obfuscate."
"Enigma" is a noun meaning a mystery or a puzzle. You may use an "enigma" to "obfuscate" a situation, but they are not antonyms.
"Stubborn" and "headstrong" are both adjectives meaning willful or determined.
"Plaudit" is a noun meaning praise.
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