All SAT Critical Reading Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1062 : Parts Of Speech In One Blank Sentences
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Marisol had only a(n) __________ understanding of how to fix and maintain her car, and so she took an automobile repair class.
prosaic
mundane
superficial
amicable
intrepid
superficial
"Superficial" means shallow, or lacking depth.
Example Question #941 : Parts Of Speech In One Blank Sentences
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Because Louisa had just jogged three miles in the sun, her face looked __________.
ornate
restive
sanctimonious
implacable
florid
florid
"Florid" means having a red or flushed complexion. It also can mean flowery or ornate.
Example Question #942 : Parts Of Speech In One Blank Sentences
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
I don’t know what to do with a very __________ student whom I have. My usual responses to bad behavior, such as sending him to the principal’s office and having conferences with the parents, are not changing his actions.
impractical
laconic
ingenuous
recalcitrant
diaphanous
recalcitrant
"Recalcitrant" means defiant or unapologetic.
Example Question #1067 : Parts Of Speech In One Blank Sentences
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
The cartoon __________ portrays human beings befriending dinosaurs, a historical and scientific implausibility.
scrupulously
anachronistically
mellifluously
allegedly
benignly
anachronistically
A human being befriending a dinosaur is historically and scientifically incorrect, and "anachronistically" is the only answer choice that fits. “Anachronistically” means historically out of place.
Example Question #1992 : Psat Critical Reading
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Many readers pored through the romance novel, looking for every __________ detail.
recurring
grotesque
urbane
logistical
lurid
lurid
While details could be "urbane," "recurring," "logistical," "grotesque," or "lurid," only "lurid" refers to the facts one would be most likely to find in a romance novel.
Example Question #391 : Adjectives And Adverbs In One Blank Sentences
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
He had taken such a(n) __________ position that no one would believe him.
untenable
salubrious
litigated
illusory
entrenched
untenable
His position was difficult to hold or impossible to use to convince other people, thus it was "untenable." "Salibrous: can be crossed off immediately for not pertaining to a position, but instead to health. While he may be "entrenched" in this opinion, his relationship to the opinion is not in question. While "illusory" is a tempting option as it means not real, he is holding a real position; it is simply unable to be maintained or defended.
Example Question #1041 : One Blank Sentences
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Pigeons are __________ in New York City; it is hard to cross the street without seeing one.
abundant
plethora
paucity
sparse
surfeit
abundant
The answer must be an adjective that describes the noun "pigeons." "Plethora" is a noun that means a large group and "surfeit" is a noun that means excess. "Abundant" is the only adjective that suggests a large number, while "paucity" and "sparse" refer to a small number.
Example Question #1071 : Parts Of Speech In One Blank Sentences
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Don't be __________—I don't have time to argue about such trivial details.
commensurate
childish
hyperbolic
petty
maudlin
petty
The person being addressed in the sentence seems to be making a big deal out of "trivial issues," meaning that "petty" is the correct answer. The other answer choices provide confusing contrasts to pettiness—such as "hyperbolic" (exaggerating), "childish" (immature), "commensurate" (proportional), or "maudlin" (overly sentimental).
Example Question #401 : Adjectives And Adverbs In One Blank Sentences
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
After three months in solitary confinement, the prisoner's body was __________.
delirious
discordant
incompetent
weak
enticing
weak
Although solitary confinement suggests insanity or lack of social structure, the sentence is specifically describing the prisoner's body, not his mental state. We need an adjective with a negative connotation, so "enticing" makes no sense. "Incompetent" and "delirious," though they could describe a person after solitary confinement, would not be used to refer to the body. "Discordant," although possibly descriptive of a prisoner's state of mind or actions after receiving solitary confinement, does not describe the body. These answer choices are especially difficult because "weak" is the least complex vocabulary word in the answer choices.
Example Question #1995 : Psat Critical Reading
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Napoleon may have been _________ in stature, but he was still a powerful ruler who almost controlled the whole European continent.
lupine
sagacious
diminutive
illuminated
arrogant
diminutive
From the use of the word “stature” you know that whatever attribute of Napoleon is being described it refers to his size. Of the five answer choices only diminutive is a word that describes the size of something. Diminutive means very small, and is the correct answer. Sagacious means wise; lupine means wolf-like or related to wolves; illuminated means to make something easier to understand.