SAT Critical Reading : Verbs in One-Blank Sentences

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for SAT Critical Reading

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Example Questions

Example Question #601 : Sentence Completion Questions

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

Rumors have a tendency to __________ rapidly after being heard by two or three people. After the passage of several days, the initial remark, told in such quiet circumstances, can easily come to be known by an entire community.

Possible Answers:

transform

evolve

dissipate

propagate

alter

Correct answer:

propagate

Explanation:

Although we might think that rumors transform (and grow) in the telling, all that our sentence implies is that they travel quickly and broadly. To “propagate,” while often meaning to breed a species of animal, it likewise can mean to spread something abroad.

Example Question #141 : Verbs In One Blank Sentences

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

The jail officers would often __________ Joseph’s body by using a whip with many tendrils covered in jagged glass pieces.

Possible Answers:

excoriate

bruise

lacerate

punish

overwhelm

Correct answer:

lacerate

Explanation:

Since it is remarked that the whip has jagged glass on its tendrils, such a weapon could do considerable damage to the flesh of the one being whipped.  When flesh is “lacerated,” it has been deeply torn or cut. 

Example Question #1512 : Psat Critical Reading

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

Ryan could not abide even the existence of any opposing viewpoints and therefore insisted on __________ them quickly and decisively.

Possible Answers:

annihilating

criticizing

berating

condemning

disparaging

Correct answer:

annihilating

Explanation:

Since Ryan could not stand even for the existence of opposing viewpoints, it would seem that he would like to completely destroy them if at all possible.  The word “annihilate” comes from the Latin “nihil,” meaning “nothing.”  Therefore, to annihilate something means to destroy it utterly.  In English, if one his a “nihilist,” he or she is generally described as believing that there is no (nihil) meaning to life.

Example Question #1513 : Psat Critical Reading

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

Every night at the mess hall, Phillip carefully discussed matters with his fellow soldiers, hoping to __________ his sense of hope and courage into his demoralized peers.

Possible Answers:

invoke

escalate

instill

engender

awaken

Correct answer:

instill

Explanation:

Since Philip is looking to transfer his sense of hope to the other soldiers, he is trying to “instill” it.  This is particularly the case given that Phillip is doing this “carefully” and nightly, implying that he is doing so “little by little.”  This gradual action is implied by the word “instill.”  It is derived from the Latin for “a drop,” so the word could be translated in a literal fashion “to place (an idea) into someone ‘drop by drop.’”

Example Question #1514 : Psat Critical Reading

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

When the army entered the small town, the general demanded that the citizens __________ his troops, as he had no tents or any other means by which to shelter them.

Possible Answers:

maintain

fortify

support

quarter

sustain

Correct answer:

quarter

Explanation:

The key thing to note is that the general is looking for shelter for his troops.  The word “quarter” can function as a verb meaning “to give shelter to someone.”  This verbal form is related to the noun usage found in “His private quarters were a filthy mess.”  In this case, “quarters” indicates the room (usually applying to a member of the military).

Example Question #1515 : Psat Critical Reading

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

Only after many millennia did human beings __________ wild animals, making them fit for a number of agricultural functions.

Possible Answers:

subdue

punish

domesticate

contrain

restrict

Correct answer:

domesticate

Explanation:

Although it might be the case that humans had to punish or constrain animals in order to make them usable, the only thing that we can assert in this sentence is that something was done in order to make them usable for farming ends.  The process of “domestication” literally means “making something able to be in the house.”  It has this meaning because the word is derived from the Latin word “domus” for “house,” a root found likewise in the word “domicile.”  In English, the word particularly indicates the process of taming something in order to make it able to be a pet or suitable for farming.  The latter is directly stated in the sentence.

Example Question #531 : Parts Of Speech In One Blank Sentences

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

The workers ___________ in the parking lot, hoping to surprise their boss by greeting him as a group for his birthday.

Possible Answers:

hid

dispersed

congregated

celebrated

disseminate

Correct answer:

congregated

Explanation:

The workers are hoping to greet the boss “as a group,” meaning that they gathered together.  The word “congregate” does not only have religious overtones but more generally and properly means any act of gathering together as a crowd.  It comes from the combined parts “con-”, meaning “with” or “together” and “-gregate,” which is derived from the Latin roots for “herd” or “flock.”  A congregation is a “flocking together” or (more kind to human sensibilities) a “gathering together.”  The prefix is very common, being found in many words like “colloquy” and “cooperate.”  The latter is found in words like “aggregate” and “segregate.” 

Example Question #142 : Verbs In One Blank Sentences

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

The old man liked to __________ on a single proverb daily, often returning to reflect on the text throughout the day.

Possible Answers:

concentrate

ruminate

focus

reserach

brood

Correct answer:

ruminate

Explanation:

To “ruminate” on something is to return and ponder over it through the day.  The only other option that might seem plausible in this regard would be “brood,” but that has the added negative connotation of thinking about something unhappy.  The word “ruminate” originally comes from Latin roots meaning to “chew over.”  It is used to describe animals like cows, which are named “ruminants.”  Such animals chew the food that they regurgitate from their first stomach (their “rumen”). 

Example Question #143 : Verbs In One Blank Sentences

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

Although it was obvious to all of John’s friends that Susan thought he was socially awkward, from his own perspective, he __________ that he had shown her such grace and charm that she had been swept off her feet.

Possible Answers:

remarked

demanded

fancied

claimed

argued

Correct answer:

fancied

Explanation:

There is no indication in this sentence that John and his friends are in the midst of debating his charm (or lack there of).  Therefore, the word “fancied” is the best choice, as it means “to think or imagine.”  The word is derived from the older term “phantasy,” meaning “imagination.”  This term itself was derived from the older philosophical terms “phantasia” and “phantasm,” which were parts of the theories of knowledge particularly found in medieval scholasticism but likewise stretching all the way back to Aristotle.

Example Question #144 : Verbs In One Blank Sentences

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

When one cannot see the connection between two concepts, it is often necessary to __________ a number of potential intermediaries until one discovers the true nature of the connection between the original two notions.

Possible Answers:

posit

conjure

falsify

dissimulate

embellish

Correct answer:

posit

Explanation:

When arguing, one sometimes has to assume some fact or other in order to make an initial argument.  To “posit” something is to “place” such a fact forward as a possible explanation.  Generally speaking, such things are assumed to be true, though they are used as an investigation tool to start an argument that would otherwise be impossible without some initial test assumptions.  Insofar as the word means “to place,” you can see that it is related to English words like “position,” “impose,” “postpone,” and “reposition.”

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