SAT Critical Reading : Two-Blank Sentences

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for SAT Critical Reading

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Example Questions

Example Question #23 : Nouns And Verbs In Two Blank Sentences

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

Our high school football team’s offensive line has really __________ into a __________, moving as one gigantic thing.

Possible Answers:

coalesced . . . colossus

atomized . . . gargantuan

amalgamated . . . convolution

merged . . . diminution

dissipated . . . ephemera

Correct answer:

coalesced . . . colossus

Explanation:

"Coalesced" means merged into a whole, while a "colossus" is a gigantic statue or thing. A football team's offensive line merging into one unit would certainly move like a gigantic thing, a colossus.

Example Question #2651 : Sat Critical Reading

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

The utter __________ of repetitious office work often __________ workers to the point of exasperation.

Possible Answers:

insensitivity . . . inspires

monotony . . . bores

noxiousness . . . poisons

tedium . . . agitates

guilelessness . . . depresses

Correct answer:

monotony . . . bores

Explanation:

"Monotony . . . bores" is the only pairing that makes logical sense since “monotony” means tedious sameness and “bores” means to causes one to lose interest in something. Although "tedium . . . agitates" looks like an appealing choice, “agitates” actually means excites, the exact opposite of the meaning needed in the second blank.

Example Question #24 : Nouns And Verbs In Two Blank Sentences

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

Demonstrating his __________ on the piano, the musician was able to __________ three different melodies in his performance.

Possible Answers:

adroitness . . . transmute

proficiency . . . promulgate

unfamiliarity . . . unite

ineptitude . . . melded

virtuosity . . . juxtapose

Correct answer:

virtuosity . . . juxtapose

Explanation:

The correct answer will refer to the musician's skill on the piano ("virtuosity") and as a result, how he is able to combine ("juxtapose") three different melodies in his performance. The incorrect answers either dismiss the musician's skill ("ineptitude" and "unfamiliarity") or do not use a verb that indicates that the musician combined the melodies ("transmute" and "promulgate").

Example Question #1425 : Sentence Completion

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

The bishop wanted to __________ the expansion of the heretical __________ in the rural areas. If it could be stopped there, it would likely fade out of existence in the cities.

Possible Answers:

persecute . . . group

quarter . . . renegades

arrest  . . . sect

lambast . . . fools

prosecute . . . dissidents

Correct answer:

arrest  . . . sect

Explanation:

The second sentence indicates that the bishop wishes to stop the movement.  It does not indicate any desire to persecute.  The word “arrest” might seem, at first glance, to carry the same negative, “persecuting” sense as some of the other options, but the word likewise can mean “to stop” as in the usage “arrested development” to describe someone who is stunted with regard to some kind of growth.  A “sect” is group differentiated by their beliefs, often with a negative connotation in regard to an accepted orthodoxy.

Example Question #2651 : Sat Critical Reading

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

When the __________ began sweating, his guilt __________ itself for everyone in the courtroom to see.

Possible Answers:

analgesic . . . revealed

defendant . . . concealed

suspect . . . allocated

litigant . . . manifested

barrister . . . allayed

Correct answer:

litigant . . . manifested

Explanation:

A "litigant" is someone involved in a lawsuit, while to "manifest" means, in this instance, to show plainly. Arguably, a sweating and presumably nervous litigant would reveal himself to be guilty.

Example Question #141 : Two Blank Sentences

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

Othmar’s fame was barely beginning to __________, and many people anticipated many more years of increasing __________.

Possible Answers:

wax . . . renown

ferment . . . influence

wane . . . popularity

register . . . voracity

change . . . notoriety

Correct answer:

wax . . . renown

Explanation:

The sense of the sentence communicates that Othmar’s fame is increasing. When something “waxes,” it is increasing in size or intensity. The word is normally used to describe the increasing of lunar light as the moon becomes larger (at least in its visibility, that is). This primary usage is often transferred in order to describe the growing of things other than the moon. The opposite term (i.e. the term for decreasing lunar light exposure) is “wane.”

The second word, “renown,” means fame, particularly in the sense of being discussed by many people. It is derived from roots related to words like “nominate” and “nominal”—words that have to deal with the notion of names (the “nom-” root).

Example Question #71 : Two Blank Sentences

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

For years upon years, the people grew ever more tired under the reign of the tired old king, who refused to alter the power structure even in his aging __________. At last, in a sudden turn of events, he __________ from his rule and granted the kingship to his heir.

Possible Answers:

conditioned . . . absconded

lineaments . . . weaseled

dotage . . . abdicated

narcolepsy . . . perished

confusion . . . tyrannized

Correct answer:

dotage . . . abdicated

Explanation:

As one ages (and becomes tired), they can be said to be in a state of “dotage,” meaning that they are old and weak. To step down from rule is to “abdicate” from it.

Example Question #72 : Two Blank Sentences

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

Because of his thick skin, the director was hardly __________ by the __________ of criticism he faced for his controversial film.

Possible Answers:

pleased . . . dearth

unaffected . . . flood

impacted . . . waive

fazed . . . barrage

distrusted . . . lack

Correct answer:

fazed . . . barrage

Explanation:

We are told that the director's reaction is due to his thick skin, which tells us that there is some substantial criticism (so we can rule out "dearth," or lack) and that he is not overly-affected by it (so we can cross out "unaffected," because if he is "hardly unaffected," the double negative (as in math) would mean that he was, in fact, quite affected by the criticism. The "impacted . . . waive" option would work if the second word were the noun "wave" instead of the verb "waive," which means to give something up willingly. We are left with "fazed" (affected) and "barrage" (an onslaught or flood).

Example Question #1 : Nouns And Adjectives Or Adverbs In Two Blank Sentences

For biochemists, every high-level biological structure must include some explanation regarding the simpler chemical structures to which the __________ are __________ bound.

Possible Answers:

vertebra . . . rigidly

macrostructures . . . inextricably

macroinvertebrates . . . singularly

tissues . . . directly

organs . . . reducibly

Correct answer:

macrostructures . . . inextricably

Explanation:

Something that is “higher level” in a given structure could be called the “macrostructure.” The prefix “macro” means larger or longer and is used in words like “macroeconomics” and “macrophage.” If explanations of such structures “must” include that of the simpler ones, the former are directly bound to the latter. If two things are “inextricable,” they cannot be separated from each other. To extricate something is to remove it from things constraining and bound to it.

Example Question #101 : Two Blank Sentences

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

The human brain was by far the most popular subject among the biology students, even though it was also the most __________ to study, as they found all of its __________ fascinating.

Possible Answers:

strenuous . . . intricacies

burdensome . . . prowess

illusory . . . frustrations

undemanding . . . complexity

debilitating . . . structure

Correct answer:

strenuous . . . intricacies

Explanation:

That a school subject is popular even though it has another characteristic tells us that characteristic should be negative. "Burdensome" and "strenuous" would both work. This makes the options for the second blank "intricacies" and "prowess." "Intricacies" makes more sense in the context of this sentence, because it indicates complexity, where "prowess" indicates skill.

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