PSAT Critical Reading : Nouns in One-Blank Sentences

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for PSAT Critical Reading

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Example Questions

Example Question #173 : Nouns In One Blank Sentences

Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.

When Robert was forced to travel in the social circles of his wealthy relatives, he would often remind himself that he was really a __________ at heart, never having truly abandoned the humble conditions in which he had been raised.

Possible Answers:

pleb

servant

yokel

sluggard

redneck

Correct answer:

pleb

Explanation:

Here, the word “pleb,” though odd, captures the sense best of all. There are no negative or slavish implications in the description of Robert’s apparent humble beginnings.  The word is a shortened form of “plebeian,” which means a commoner. It is basically an import from the Latin “plebs” which means basically the same thing.

Example Question #174 : Nouns In One Blank Sentences

Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.

Thinking about the exciting advances in the methods of charting the stars, Peter looked on his shelf at his measuring tools and seeing the __________ sitting there, he decided to name his first son after the instrument.

Possible Answers:

astrolabe

atlas

compass

globe

ruler

Correct answer:

astrolabe

Explanation:

Although many of the other instruments listed here are tempting, we know that the most appropriate tool would be that which would most definitely be used for charting stars. Such a tool is an “astrolabe,” which was used in navigation based on the stars. It means literally to take the stars. You should know the “astro-” root word, which is found in words like “astronaut” and “astronomy.”

Example Question #175 : Nouns In One Blank Sentences

Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.

Donald never had the strongest __________, but as he aged, all of his friends increasingly worried that any sickness might significantly debilitate the little natural vigor that he had.

Possible Answers:

digestion

immunity

outlook

constitution

leukocytes

Correct answer:

constitution

Explanation:

A “constitution” in general regards the makeup of something. (One can say that something is “constituted of” a number of parts). When applied to a person, it often carries with it the sense of signifying that person’s physical state and vigor. Since the sentence focus not on Donald’s immune system as much as his “little natural vigor,” it is better to choose “constitution” than some of the other potential options like “immunity” or perhaps (for the biologists) “leukocytes.”

Example Question #176 : Nouns In One Blank Sentences

Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.

In the opinion of the whole town, Henry was nothing but a __________, taking money from people without repaying, drinking alcohol all day, refusing to care for his children, and regularly vandalizing others’ property.

Possible Answers:

wastrel

cadge

mooch

freeloader

idler

Correct answer:

wastrel

Explanation:

A “wastrel” is quite literally a total “waste.” Such a person is not merely a “mooch” or an “idler” or anything of that sort. Instead, the person really has no redeeming qualities, quite like Henry in our description.

Example Question #177 : Nouns In One Blank Sentences

Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.

After the earthquake had ceased, Megan wished she had paid heed to the __________ that she had that morning and had driven far away from town to avoid what she eerily suspected would happen that day.

Possible Answers:

premonition

notion

vision

intuition

hunch

Correct answer:

premonition

Explanation:

A “premonition” is a “pre-warning” or a sense of doom that occurs before something bad actually happens. This is better than even “intuition” or “hunch” because Megan clearly had a sense that something bad would happen. The “-monition” portion of the word comes form the Latin “monere,” meaning to warn, that is used in the word “admonish.”

Example Question #261 : Sentence Completions

Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.

After much __________, the young computer programmer realized the answer to the algorithm problem that had absorbed his thought for many hours.

Possible Answers:

cogitation

vexation

mystification

perplexity

frittering

Correct answer:

cogitation

Explanation:

Although the programmer might have been perplexed, mystified, or vexed (or have frittered away time), we are not able to go beyond the literal sense of our sentence. All that we can say is that the problem had absorbed his thought many hours; therefore, we can say that he had to “cogitate” which means to think over something insistently. It is related to words like “cognition,” though it also literally could be taken to mean to turn over as in “to turn over and over in one’s mind.”

Example Question #262 : Sentence Completions

Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.

Since Meredith could not be present at the town meeting, she sent her only son to be her __________ in the debates and votes.

Possible Answers:

reconnaissance

inquisitor

proxy

intelligence

source

Correct answer:

proxy

Explanation:

Someone who is a “proxy” is one who represents someone else at a meeting or an assembly. In the world of computers a “proxy server” is one that sits between computer A and computer B, allowing A to (potentially) spoof B into thinking that the traffic is coming from somewhere else. For example, if computer P is the proxy, instead of communicating A → B and B → A, the communication is A → P, P → B, B → P, and (finally) P → A. Here, P is acting in “proxy” between A and B (like Meredith’s son).

Example Question #263 : Sentence Completions

Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.

When Charles became involved in an argument with his in-laws, he did not realize the complicated and endless __________ of family feuding that would become a regular part of his life.

Possible Answers:

tussle

quagmire

bickering

war

quarrel

Correct answer:

quagmire

Explanation:

Directly defined, a quagmire is a kind of bog that causes one to sink into its ground because of its softness. It is derived from the parts “quag” and “mire”—both words for bogs and marshes. In its extended sense, a quagmire is complex situation from which it is difficult to remove oneself. Here this meaning is indicated particularly by the adjective “complicated” as well as (to a lesser extend) “endless.”

Example Question #181 : Parts Of Speech In One Blank Sentences

Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.

Some people grasp concepts with an immediate, intuitive flair, while others require much __________ to come to the same conclusions.

Possible Answers:

questioning

experimentation

research

ratiocination

testing

Correct answer:

ratiocination

Explanation:

The contrast communicated in this sentence is between those who understand things immediately while others must think about them quite a bit. Although such things might involve research, experiments, and the like, none of these are necessarily the case. (For instance, one could think over a math problem for some time, and none of the involved actions would fit any of those categories, strictly speaking). “Ratiocination” is a process of exact, reasoned thought, often implying a long train of necessary steps—i.e. proceeding in a non-intuitive (though valid) manner. The word is related to the word “rational” and other such “ratio-” words.

Example Question #351 : One Blank Sentences

Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.

Although some words like “principle,” “cause,” and so forth seem to have one single meaning, in reality they are susceptible to a number of differing __________.

Possible Answers:

words

modes

expressions

articulations

lexicons

Correct answer:

modes

Explanation:

All that is implied is that certain words (“principle,” “cause,” and so forth) can take on various shades. It is fare to say that these would be different “modes” of expressing the same words. The word is often used in the sense of (e.g.) “mode of transportation.” Even in this case, you can see how the word means “manner of transportation,” implying a “given particular ‘shading’ of the general notion of ‘transportation.’”

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