All ISEE Upper Level Verbal Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #195 : Adjectives And Adverbs In One Blank Sentences
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Carly thought that the poem she had to read for her English class was rather __________; in her opinion, its treatment of its subject was far too simplistic and none of its other features caught her interest.
jejune
boisterous
weathered
exciting
ambiguous
jejune
Because we know that Carly thought "[the poem's] treatment of its subject was far too simplistic" and "none of its other features caught her interest," we can infer that she thought the poem to be dull. So, we need to pick out a word that means something like "too simple" or "dull." We can rule out "exciting" as a potential answer because "exciting" is an antonym of the word that we're looking for. "Jejune," however, is an adjective that means "naive, simplistic, and superficial" or when used of ideas or writings, "dry and uninteresting." Because "jejune" is the answer choice that best fits the sentence's context, it is the correct answer.
Example Question #196 : Adjectives And Adverbs In One Blank Sentences
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
The bulldog is often stereotyped as a(n) __________ breed, because once it latches its jaws onto something, it takes an immense amount of force to make it let go; some people assume that the breed has a similarly intractable personality.
meek
friendly
bustling
crude
obdurate
obdurate
We can infer from the sentence that we need to pick out a word that means something like "stubborn," because "some people assume that the breed has a[n] . . . intractable personality," and "intractable" is a synonym of "stubborn." So, "meek" cannot be the correct answer because "meek" is an antonym of "stubborn," not a synonym. "Obdurate," however, is an adjective that means "stubbornly refusing to change one's opinion or course of action," and because "obdurate" is the answer choice which best fits the context of the sentence, it is the correct answer.
Example Question #871 : Sentence Completion Questions
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Although the question of the soul’s immortality was interesting to the physicist, he was not currently concerned with it, as it was __________ to the questions he was asking in his experiment on the rotation of the earth on its axis.
ridiculous
upending
absurd
extraneous
disconcerting
extraneous
The important thing to note in this sentence is that, in his experiment at least, the physicist is unconcerned with the question of the soul’s immortality. The question could be said to be “outside” of his concerns or irrelevant for his considerations. When something is called “extraneous” it is being described as being thus unrelated. The word comes from the Latin for “external” or “foreign.”
Example Question #842 : Sentence Completions
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
While working in retail, I encountered many __________ customers, who always considered thelmselves superior to me.
haughty
brazen
empathetic
fortuitous
benevolent
haughty
Because the customers considered themselves superior, they were most likely arrogant while talking down to me, making them "haughty."
Example Question #873 : Sentence Completion Questions
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
For twenty years he lived a _________ existence before finally marrying and settling down.
quaint
peripatetic
reclusive
peaceful
content
peripatetic
The key word in this sentence is “settling.” The opening phrase of the sentence stands in contrast to the second clause, and the missing word needs to be the opposite of “settling.” Only “peripatetic” is an antonym of “settling.”
Example Question #843 : Sentence Completions
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Lauren could calmly accept any true criticism, but she found the remarks made by John to concern ultimately insignificant matters and be rather __________ in nature.
petty
quizzical
playful
questionable
unreflective
petty
The key expression here is “insignificant matters.” Therefore, she found John’s critiques to be rather small or insignificant. The best word to describe such things would be “petty,” which means “small” or “trivial.” It is related to the French “petit,” meaning small, and which is often used in English in the same sense.
Example Question #875 : Sentence Completion Questions
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Never one to waste words, Julius Caesar's military dispatches were __________ and almost curt.
noble
laconic
bellicose
dreary
effusive
laconic
The idea here is that Caesar never wasted words, so that should mean his dispatches were short. So, we need to pick out an answer choice that means something like short. "Effusive" is the opposite of short; it means overflowing, unreserved, and exuberant. "Dreary" means boring or uninteresting—it doesn't fit with our expectation of being short. Neither does "noble," which means upstanding or righteous, nor does "bellicose," which means warlike. The best answer choice is "laconic," which means terse, concise, or using few words.
Example Question #876 : Sentence Completion Questions
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Zachary took the numerous encouraging events to be _________ signs of a positive turn of events in his life.
questionable
auspicious
fortuitous
inconstant
felicitous
auspicious
The best word here is “auspicious,” thought “felicitous” is a very tempting trap word. The latter indicates that something is pleasing or very appropriate for the given circumstances. When something is “auspicious” it is not merely a “happy chance” but moreover indicates (or at least forecasts) future success, something for which Zachary was hoping, as indicated by the interpretation of these signs as hopefully indicating “a positive turn of events.” The word “auspice” literally means a token of prophecy, coming from the Latin word for one who looks at birds to discover the will of the gods. When one says that something was “done under the auspices of X,” he or she means that X supported the given undertaking.
Example Question #851 : One Blank Sentences
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Although he tried to find a pattern amid the __________ stock prices, the markets’ volatility was too great for him to discover any short-term or long-term order.
soaring
receding
falling
fluctuating
unkempt
fluctuating
When something fluctuates, its changes in an irregular manner, making it hard to predict that which is fluctuating. That this is the case in our sentence is hinted by the fact that the “volatility was too great” for any kind of forecasting. The word is derived from the Latin verb for “to flow,” and has related English words like “flux” and “influx” as well as “influence” and “fluid.”
Example Question #878 : Sentence Completion Questions
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Although the house was relatively new, it was in a state of significant disrepair, to the point that it looked much worse than many old, __________ buildings in town.
dilapidated
outmoted
outdated
venerable
Victorian
dilapidated
The implication in this sentence is that the house was in more disrepair than even many other deteriorating houses in town. The best word to match this sense is “dilapidated,” which means “falling apart due to age or lack of care.” It is derived from the prefix “di-” meaning “apart or down from” and the Latin word for stone, “lapis.” The stone lapis lazuli is so named because it is the stone (lapis) from the place in Persia (now Iran) that was Latinized as Lazulus.
Certified Tutor
Certified Tutor