All ISEE Middle Level Verbal Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #65 : Synonyms: Nouns
Select the answer choice that is closest in meaning to the word in capital letters.
ACCOLADE
Inkling
Apparel
Award
Sleet
Wound
Award
An "accolade" is an award or reward given in recognition of someone's accomplishments. To provide further help, "apparel" is clothing; an "inkling" is an idea, a notion, an unsure idea about something; "sleet" is a combination of rain and snow.
Example Question #66 : Synonyms: Nouns
Select the answer choice that is closest in meaning to the word in capital letters.
WEARINESS
Hearsay
Exhaustion
Frankness
Wealth
Poverty
Exhaustion
To be "weary" means to be tired, so "weariness" is tiredness or exhaustion. To provide further help, "frankness" is honesty, often brutal honesty; "poverty" is the state of being very poor, the opposite of "wealth"; "hearsay" is gossip, unreliable information passed along within a group of people.
Example Question #67 : Synonyms: Nouns
Select the answer choice that is closest in meaning to the word in capital letters.
TOME
Volume
Ream
Cemetery
Sepulcher
Grave
Volume
Do not confuse the word "tome" with "tomb." They are different words! The word "tomb" refers to a grave in which someone is buried. The word "tome" indicates . Hence, the only option that is acceptable is "volume." Think of when someone says, "He opened the large volume and flipped through its pages." This means that the person has opened up a large book to flip through the pages.
Example Question #68 : Synonyms: Nouns
Select the answer choice that is closest in meaning to the word in capital letters.
GASH
Exfoliation
Laceration
Cut
Injury
Scrape
Laceration
The word "gash" describes a kind of deep and large wound, not merely a scrape or a mere cut. Therefore, you should not choose any of the options that do not indicate a very bad wound unless there are no other options; however, there is an important other option, namely, "laceration." A "laceration" is a large cut. The word comes from Latin roots meaning to mangle, meaning to tear apart. Indeed, this is a strong enough option and is, therefore, the best among those provided.
Example Question #69 : Synonyms: Nouns
Select the answer choice that is closest in meaning to the word in capital letters.
GRIME
Stain
Oil
Disease
Filth
Infirmity
Filth
Likely, you have heard the expression "dirt and grime," referring to what has collected on something that is quite dirty. In general, "grime" is used as a word indicating dirt. The only wrong options that should be somewhat tempting are "oil" and "stain"; however, "oil" only describes one particular kind of grime, and a "stain" may be what happens whenever something is grimy (hence, it is not the "grime" itself).
Example Question #1 : Synonyms: Nouns For Abstract Concepts
Which of the following is a synonym of "adage?"
Desire
Nonsense
Saying
Paradox
Absurdity
Saying
Adage typically refers to a motto or saying of conventional wisdom. For example, "he relentlessly repeated the familiar adage."
Most of the other words are antonyms, with the exception of "desire" which is unrelated.
Example Question #651 : Isee Middle Level (Grades 7 8) Verbal Reasoning
A synonym of "jest" is . . .
rhythm
joke
just
cause
point
joke
"Jest" is a word that when used as a noun, means "a thing said or done for amusement; a joke," and when used as a verb, means "speak or act in a joking manner." So, we need to pick out an answer choice that is either a noun meaning something like "joke" or a verb meaning something like "act in a joking manner." While "just" may sound like "jest," "just" has a variety of meanings including "based on or behaving according to what is morally right and fair" when used as an adjective, and when used as an adverb, "exactly," "very recently," "barely," "simply," or "expressing agreement." So, "just" cannot be the correct answer. "Joke," however, means the same thing as "jest," so "joke" is the correct answer.
Example Question #652 : Isee Middle Level (Grades 7 8) Verbal Reasoning
A synonym of "parody" is __________.
imitation
tragedy
song
comedy
book
imitation
"Parody" is a word that when used as a noun means "an imitation of the style of a particular writer, artist, or genre with deliberate exaggeration for comic effect." So, while a comedy, tragedy, book, or song might each be a parody, none of those answer choices are synonymous with parody, so none of them can be the correct answer. "Imitation," a noun meaning "a thing intended to simulate or copy something else," is the answer choice closest in meaning to "parody," so it is the correct answer.
Example Question #653 : Isee Middle Level (Grades 7 8) Verbal Reasoning
A synonym of "getaway" is __________.
measure
approach
flee
bob
escape
escape
"Getaway" is a noun that means "an escape or quick departure, especially after committing a crime." So, we need to pick out an answer choice that is a noun and means something like "escape." While "flee" may look like a potentially correct answer choice because "flee" and "escape" are synonyms when both words are used as verbs, "flee" cannot be used as a noun like "escape" can, so "escape" is the correct answer because it can be used as a noun and "getaway" is a noun.
Example Question #4 : Synonyms: Nouns For Abstract Concepts
Choose the best synonym for the word in capital letters.
REMEDY
source
medicine
difficulty
tapestry
warmth
medicine
"Remedy" means a treatment or medicine.
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All ISEE Middle Level Verbal Resources
