All HSPT Verbal Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #601 : Hspt Verbal Skills
An antonym of "impede" is __________.
destroy
diminish
crescendo
facilitate
accept
facilitate
When something is impeded, it is prevented from doing its activity. The word literally comes from the Latin roots meaning to place something on the foot. (The word "pedestrian" has the same "pede" in it.) An antonym for impede would express the activity of helping something on its way. Among the options provided, the best such word is "facilitate," meaning to make easier. The "facil-" prefix means easy, as in "facile."
Example Question #602 : Hspt Verbal Skills
An antonym of "sanction" is ___________.
corrupt
proscribe
incarcerate
reduce
levy
proscribe
The word "sanction" can have two meanings when it is used as a verb. On the one hand, it can mean to threaten with a penalty. On the other hand, it can also mean to approve. Luckily, none of the wrong answers are an antonym for the meaning of threatening with a penalty. Therefore, we must assume that it means to approve. In contrast to this, to "proscribe" can mean to outlaw or to forbid.
Example Question #601 : Hspt Verbal Skills
An antonym of "transfer" is __________.
convey
retain
relocate
disdain
grant
retain
The word "transfer" literally means to carry across (as in carrying across a border). When someone transfers goods or money, he or she sends them to someone else (or to another place). In contrast to such conveyance, we could consider an antonym to be "to hold on to." The word "retain" means just this, namely to keep something in someone's own possession (instead of giving it).
Example Question #604 : Hspt Verbal Skills
An antonym of "subsist" is ___________.
survive
meander
accede
burgeon
obscure
burgeon
When someone is said to "subsist" on something, he or she barely survives—only well enough to keep together his or her physical being. This comes from the old philosophical notion of subsistence, which indicates the basic existence of a being—though not necessarily implying any great flourishing. In contrast to this, "burgeoning" growth is great, fruitful growth. When something or someone is burgeoning, that thing is greatly flourishing. This is a good contrast to merely "subsisting."
Example Question #1 : Antonyms: Other Verbs
An antonym of "extol" is __________.
laud
disclaim
deride
neglect
acclaim
deride
The word "extol" means to praise. Several options among the answers are synonyms for this—"laud" and "acclaim". The word "disclaim" is not an antonym. It means to deny. This is not the opposite of praising, however. The word "deride" means to show contempt about something. It is related to "ridicule" and "ridiculous"—the idea being that "deriding" means to make fun of something.
Example Question #2 : Antonyms: Other Verbs
An antonym of "jeopardize" is __________.
preserve
reckon
estimate
support
miscalculate
preserve
When we put something "into jeopardy," we put that thing at risk. The verb "jeopardize" merely signifies the act of putting something into such a risky situation. The best contrast to this is to protect the thing. Among the options provided, only "preserve" has this sense of protecting in contrast to endangering the thing in question.
Example Question #3 : Antonyms: Other Verbs
An antonym of "corroborate" is __________.
pity
correct
contradict
fulminate
defame
contradict
The most frequent use of "corroborate" is probably in the sense of a courtroom testimony "corroborating" the truth or falsity of some claim. Such corroboration helps to support the claim being made. Such evidence is the opposite of contradicting evident—i.e. evidence that seems to speak against the claim being made.
Example Question #4 : Antonyms: Other Verbs
An antonym of "divulge" is __________.
accuse
apprehend
collaborate
heal
conceal
conceal
We often speak of divulging in the context of secrets that are divulged. This means that they were revealed. Surprisingly the word is related to "vulgar" which means the masses or the common people. When you divulge something, you tell it to everyone—even the "commoners." In contrast to this, when we conceal something, we "cover it up" or keep it from being known or seen.
Example Question #5 : Antonyms: Other Verbs
An antonym of "accost" is __________.
reduce
evade
alleviate
complain
pardon
evade
The word "accost" does not have to do with the price of goods. Strangely enough, it comes from the Latin that literally means to be at the side of someone or something else. In English, it means to speak to in a strong and vigorous manner. Often, it is an aggressive kind of speech, confrontational in nature. The point for this question is that accosting is directly addressing something. In contrast to this, evading something is avoiding it, quite the opposite of dealing with something "head on."
Example Question #131 : Antonyms
An antonym of "alleviate" is __________.
smite
condemn
exacerbate
gratify
torque
exacerbate
The word "alleviate" comes from Latin roots meaning light (in the sense of being not heavy). To alleviate something is to make it lighter or to reduce it. Related words are "levity" (meaning humor or light-heartedness) and "levitate." The best contrast among the options given is "exacerbate," meaning to make worse. It is related to "acerbic," which means biting and sharp—as in "acerbic wit."