All SAT Critical Reading Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1202 : Sentence Completion Questions
Choose the set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Apprehension about her safety __________ Harriet to __________ the snowball fight, especially when she heard some of the other kids yelp in pain when they got hit with the hard-packed projectiles.
convinced . . . partake in
emulated . . . stop
discovered . . . avoid
compelled . . . forgo
facilitated . . . run
compelled . . . forgo
We can infer from the sentence's context that we need to pick out a word for the first blank that means something like "made" or "encouraged" since we know that Harriet's apprehension likely made her do something. Either "convinced" ("persuaded someone to do something") or "compelled" ("forced or obliged someone to do something") could be correct. For the second blank, we need to pick out a word that means something like "not participate in" or "stop," given that Harriet saw other kids getting hurt in the snowball fight and that she was apprehensive about it. Potentially correct answer choices include "avoid," "stop," and "forgo" ("refrain from"). Of the possible words that we've identified as potentially correct for each blank, only "compelled" and "forgo" appear in the same answer choice, so the correct answer is "compelled . . . forgo."
Example Question #1203 : Sentence Completion Questions
Choose the set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Hoping to __________ the disputing parties, the arbitrator tried to discover and __________ the root of the conflict.
reconcile . . . eliminate
solve . . . incite
castigate . . . exterminate
extol . . . uncover
ameliorate . . . enhance
reconcile . . . eliminate
The word “arbitrator” means a person who mediates between two parties to settle a dispute. So, the arbitrator would hope to reconcile the disputing parties. We can eliminate "castigate . . . exterminate" because "castigate" means criticize or reprimand severely. The second blank requires a word that means take away; therefore, "reconcile . . . eliminate" is the right answer.
Example Question #1204 : Sentence Completion Questions
Choose the set of words that best completes the following sentence.
The judge always disliked __________ out sentences for high crimes, for exact equity and justice are quite difficult to __________ in the midst of life’s general ambiguity.
forcing . . . justify
meting . . . ascertain
announcing . . . contain
blurting . . . announce
pronouncing . . . explain
meting . . . ascertain
In an old usage, “meet” meant “to be proper or just.” When one “metes” a sentence, he or she issues a judgment. The sentence implies that the judge does not like giving (meting) out such sentences because it is difficult see and interpret all of the details in the midst of life’s ambiguities. To attempt to see and discern such details in an exact manner would be to “ascertain” them. The word is derived from the Latin word for “sure or settled” and is related to English words for “surety” such as “certificate” and “certitude.”
Example Question #1205 : Sentence Completion Questions
Choose the set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Due to a confusion about the budget, the board game club could only __________ two board games; since the two they picked would have to _________ for the entire semester, they picked them out with extreme care.
obtain . . . suffice
afford . . . include
consider . . . crease
relocate . . . optimize
lose . . . serve
obtain . . . suffice
For the first blank, we need to pick out a word that means something like get or buy. Either "obtain" (acquire) or "afford" (have enough money to be able to buy) could be correct. For the second blank, we need to pick out a verb that means something like last or be used. Either "serve" (be adequate) or "suffice" (be enough) could be potentially correct. Of the possible words that we've identified as potentially correct for each blank, only "obtain" and "suffice" appear in the same answer choice, so the correct answer is "obtain . . . suffice."
Example Question #1 : Two Adjectives Or Adverbs In Two Blank Sentences
Alice felt __________ after she was fired from her job as a college professor for her __________ behavior.
cerebral . . . mandatory
reinforced . . . histrionic
despondent . . . debauched
ludicrous . . . comely
jubilant . . . merciless
despondent . . . debauched
In sentences with two blanks it is important to ensure that the meaning of the two blanks work with one another, as well as with the sentence as a whole. From the context of the sentence it is clear that the second blank must be a form of behavior that would get Alice fired. Comely means cute and mandatory required so those two answer choices could be ruled out. Histrionic means dramatic, but being fired from her job would be unlikely to make Alice feel reinforced so we can rule out that option. Merciless means cruel and without mercy, but again being fired is not going to make Alice feel jubilant. That leaves us with only despondent and debauched. Despondent means upset or disappointed, which is a normal reaction to being fired and debauched means wicked or lurid. This answer choice fits.
Example Question #1 : Two Adjectives Or Adverbs In Two Blank Sentences
During his reign, many noblemen found Julius Caesar’s self-promotion __________, others took a much stronger opinion and declared his behavior unredeemable and __________.
erratic . . . regressive
insufferable . . . reprehensible
petulant . . . worthy
prosaic . . . disparaging
informal . . . cursory
insufferable . . . reprehensible
This sentence explains the relationship between the two blanks by saying that the second opinion is much stronger than the first opinion. This means that the two blanks both have to focus on the same general principle and that the second is an exaggeration of the first. The correct answer is insufferable . . . reprehensible. Insufferable means annoying and unbearable,and reprehensible means very bad and immoral;both are negative implications and the second is stronger opinion than the first. Petulant usually refers to someone ill-tempered, but worthy means someone deserving of praise so that does not fit. Erratic means difficult to predict, which does not match with regressive. Cursory which means done superficially does not fit comfortably into the sentence. Prosaic means ordinary,which also does not fit comfortably.
Example Question #3 : Two Adjectives Or Adverbs In Two Blank Sentences
Many young computer programmers are so accustomed to rigid logic that they often are __________ when they must develop a merely __________ technique to solve a problem.
perplexed . . . heuristic
enlightened . . . uncertain
annoyed . . . probable
provoked . . . redundant
angered . . . humanistic
perplexed . . . heuristic
The contrast in this sentence is between “rigid logic” and the second blank. The word “heuristic” (particularly in computer science) means a loose rule—often explained as being a “rule of thumb.” Such devices help to simulate some scenario but not with the certainty of mathematical logic. For those who are used to such rigid logic, the development of such “heuristics” can be very difficult and perplexing—hence the choice word for the first blank.
Example Question #1206 : Sentence Completion Questions
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Although one can learn to read the most __________ written works in another language, many forms of __________ discourse can still be difficult to read.
erudite . . . idiotic
mistaken . . . edited
poetic . . . linguistic
mundane . . . scientific
sophisticated . . . colloquial
sophisticated . . . colloquial
A "sophisticated" work is one that is very complex, requiring much experience and knowledge to navigate. Although the word is distantly related to the Greek root “sophia,” meaning wisdom (and found in words like “philosophy”), “sophisticated” had a long development through more negative connotations (partially related to usages like “sophistical”). These are not reflected in our usage here.
“Colloquial” means related to ordinary speech. Its root is derived from the Latin for “to speak or talk,” which has many derivatives in English, not only including those with the “c” that we see in “interlocutors” (e.g. "locution," "allocution"), but also the more common (and phonetically related) “q” (e.g. "eloquence," "loquacious," "colloquium"). The prefix “col-” really is derived from the Latin “cum,” meaning with. Colloquial language is the language one uses to “speak with” others of similar backgrounds and upbringings.
Example Question #42 : Two Adjectives Or Adverbs In Two Blank Sentences
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
For many, Robert’s world is __________ commonplace; they cannot understand why he only cares about the __________.
frivolously . . . exceptional
incomprehensibly . . . exhilarating
understandably . . . paltry
inconceivably . . . mundane
licentiously . . . esoteric
inconceivably . . . mundane
"Inconceivable" means impossible to comprehend or grasp fully, while "mundane" means concerned with the world rather than with spiritual things or commonplace. Evidently, for many, Robert's concern with the world makes his life incomprehensibly commonplace, so "inconceivably . . . mundane" is the correct answer.
Example Question #1671 : Isee Upper Level (Grades 9 12) Verbal Reasoning
Choose the word or set of words that best completes the following sentence.
Throughout the early middle ages, what we call “canon law” was far from being the organized, __________ system of law that the Catholic Church now follows. It took the work of many jurists to collect and systematize what had been an extremely __________ system of jurisprudence.
juridical . . . lackadaisical
ecclesiastical . . . civic
pious . . . corrupt
codified . . . ad hoc
religious . . . secular
codified . . . ad hoc
The key is to realize that Catholic law was not organized, which could be described as “ad hoc”—i.e. not collected and pulled together only from case to case as needed. (The expression “ad hoc” literally means for this in Latin, indicating that something applies only “for this or that”—but not according to a universal, organized rationality); therefore, it was not gathered together into a single “code” in which all the statutes were organized. Thus, the word “codified” fits well for the first blank.