Table of Contents
How Should I Attack the Verbal Section?
How Do I Move Around on the CAT?
PART TWO: VERBAL PRACTICE TESTS
Chapter 2: GRE Sentence Completion
The Kaplan Four-Step Method for Sentence Completion
The Kaplan Four-Step Method for Analogies
The Kaplan Four-Step Method for Antonyms
Chapter 5: GRE Reading Comprehension
The Kaplan Four-Step Method for Reading Comprehension
PART THREE: ANALYTICAL WRITING
Chapter 6: Strategies for GRE Writing
The Four Basic Principles of GRE Writing
The Kaplan Five-Step Method for the Analytical Writing Measure
GRE Analytical Writing Scoring
Chapter 7: Increasing Your GRE Vocabulary
Introduction to the Word Root List
Instead of one major overhaul as originally planned the Educational Testing Service (ETS) will introduce revisions to the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) gradually, beginning with two new question types—one math, one verbal—that were introduced into the computer-based GRE in November 2007. On Test Day, you may see just one sample of the new math question type, just one sample of the new verbal question type, OR you won’t see either question at all.
For the time being, these new question types do not count toward your score. As of this printing, ETS has not announced a timeline for when these new types will count toward your score.
THE NEW VERBAL SECTION QUESTION TYPE—TEXT COMPLETION
Although Sentence Completion questions with more than one blank space are found in the GRE exam, the new Verbal question type—Text Completion—is a more complex version.
In this new Text Completion question type, you will be asked to select one entry for each blank from the corresponding column of choices, and it may include as many as three blanks within one question.
Just as with the Sentence Completion questions, this new question type tests your vocabulary and your ability to understand the context in which words are used. The principles and strategies you use for the Sentence Completion questions can be applied to the Text Completion question type. Here is a sample question:
As a result of the (i) __________ pace of life, urban living (ii) __________ many young professionals the opportunity to (iii) __________ their lives with a sense of constant excitement.
??
Answer: C, E, and I
Use the clues given in the sentence to determine which word belongs in each blank. Starting with the first, you are looking for an adjective that would best describe urban living and that is similar to constant excitement.
Choice (A) means inherent, which doesn’t fit the context of the phrase, and (B) means fleeting or brief—again, an inapt description of the pace of urban life; therefore, choice (C) is correct. The second blank requires a word that means to be made available or to give the opportunity. Therefore, choice (E) is correct. One meaning of afford is to offer or impart. The final blank requires a word that tells what young professionals have the opportunity to do. Choice (G) means to avoid and choice, (H) means to bury, so they are incorrect. Young professionals are not likely to choose urban living to avoid constant excitement, therefore (I), which means to permeate, is the correct answer.
STAY ON TOP OF THE LATEST DEVELOPMENTS
As ETS makes further announcements, you can depend on Kaplan to provide you with the most accurate, up-to-the-minute information. You can get updates by visiting us at Kaptest.com/NEWGRE.
Good Luck!
Kaplan has prepared students to take standardized tests for more than 70 years; longer than the GRE has even been around. Our team of researchers and editors know more about preparation for the GRE than anyone else, and you’ll find their accumulated knowledge and experience in this book.
The GRE is a standardized test, and so, while every test is not identical, every test covers the same content in essentially the same way. This is good news for you; it means that by studying the material in this book, you can prepare for exactly the kind of questions you can expect to encounter on Test Day.
The main focus of this book is in reviewing the verbal concepts you need to get a good score on the GRE. Strategic reviews, exercises, and practice sets with explanations will help you brush up on the verbal skills you’ll need for test day.
If possible, work through this book a little at a time over the course of several weeks. There is a lot of information to absorb, and it’s hard to do it all at once. Cramming just before the test is not a good idea. You probably won’t absorb much information if you pack it in at the last minute.
The GRE Verbal Workbook is divided into four sections, each serving its own very important purpose. With careful review and practice, the content and strategies contained in this book will help you to score your best on the GRE.
Getting Started
The first thing you need to do is find out exactly what to expect on the GRE. In part one of this book, we’ll provide you with background information on the Verbal Section of the test, what it covers, and how it’s organized. The GRE is only available in a computerized version. We will show how this version of the GRE differs from the more traditional paper-and-pencil test.
GRE Verbal Practice Tests
Once you have the big picture, you will need to focus more specifically on the test content. Part two of this book does just that. It gives you a complete tour of the Verbal question types that you will see on Test Day. There’s a chapter for each of the four major content areas: Sentence Completion, Analogies, Antonyms, and Reading Comprehension. And each chapter provides tips for mastering the question type at hand, including the Kaplan Method, which gives you time-tested strategies for approaching a question type, and plenty of testlike examples to practice on.
Analytical Writing
This section provides you with information about the GRE Analytical Writing Measure. It contains descriptions and examples of the two types of essay question types, the Issue Essay and the Argument Essay, as well as tips for successfully completing each. This chapter also presents the Kaplan Method for the Writing Section, as well as guided practice in using it to complete some sample essays. The section ends with some practice essay prompts as well as a scoring guide that will enable you to see how your practice essays measure up to the ETS scoring rubric.
Vocabulary Builder
Since vocabulary is the most important skill on the verbal portion of the GRE, the last portion of the this book contains material to help you to build your vocabulary skills. There is a list of the words that appear most frequently on the GRE, and tips for learning words in groups and for using word roots to determine a word’s meaning. If vocabulary isn’t one of your particular strengths, start studying this material immediately and consult it periodically as you continue to study.
Before we start preparing for the Verbal section of the GRE, let’s take a look at the big picture. In this chapter, we’ll discuss the content and structure of the GRE. We’ll also explain strategies for making the computer-adaptive (CAT) format of the exam work to your advantage.
The Graduate Record Examination (GRE) is a computer-based exam that is administered by Educational Testing Service (ETS). The Verbal section is 30 minutes long and is made up of four question types: Sentence Completions, Antonyms, Analogies, and Reading Comprehension. The Quantitative section is 45 minutes long and is made up of three question types: Problem Solving, Quantitative Comparison, and Graphs. The Analytical Writing Measure is 75 minutes long and consists of two essays. (You will be required to write these on the computer.) In addition, there can be up to two unscored experimental sections. A short break is given between each section.
Verbal Questions
There are about six Sentence Completion questions. In each of these, one or two words from a sentence is missing. You must select an answer choice that best fits those blanks. The heart of Sentence Completions is not grammar or vocabulary; rather, Sentence Completions test your ability to recognize the author’s intent, and find the best words to fit this meaning.
RUSSIAN ROULETTE
Don’t try to figure out which section of your test is experimental. Even if you guess right, it can hurt your score. If you guess wrong. . . .
There are about eight Analogies questions. In each of these you are given a pair of words. You must determine the relationship between these pairs and choose the pair of words from the answer choices that has the same relationship. While Analogies test vocabulary to some extent, they are really testing your ability to form a strong connection between words. Fortunately, the same types of relationship show up on the GRE over and over again.
There are about nine Antonym questions. Here you are given a word and must choose its opposite from among the answer choices. Antonym questions mainly test your vocabulary skills. Kaplan provides you with two ways to improve your performance on these questions: first by showing you which words are most likely to appear on the test, and second by giving you techniques to enable you to find the correct answer even if you do not know the meaning of all the words in the question.
The Verbal section will contain two or three reading comprehension passages (each approximately 200–300 words) with two to four questions based on each. The passages are written in difficult, often technical prose adapted from books and journals in the broad areas of the humanities, the social sciences, and the natural sciences. You shouldn’t take the reading comprehension challenge lightly. The reading skills you developed in college and use for your personal pleasure are ill-suited to success on the GRE. Reading comprehension requires a commitment to a different, more aggressive kind of reading. We’ll explain these new reading techniques in the chapter on reading comprehension.
PREDICTABLE
The GRE tests the same principles over and over. Every GRE is virtually the same as every other one because the format is consistent from year to year to yield dependable results.
Quantitative Questions
Quantitative Comparisons are a “fixed-format” question type, meaning that each of the four answer choices has a specific definition. (You may remember this question type from the SAT.) You’ll see about 15 Quantitative Comparison questions. In each you must compare two quantities and decide which is the larger, or if you have enough information to make this judgment. This is one of the most difficult question types on the GRE, but also one where your effort and a well-considered strategy yield great rewards.
You’ll see approximately ten Problem Solving questions in the classic five-answer-choice format. The concepts and skills tested are taken from the broad areas of arithmetic, algebra, and geometry—essentially the math we all studied in high school. This doesn’t mean, however, that the GRE rewards you solely for your knowledge of that material. The most successful test takers organize available data and efficiently utilize an arsenal of math tools and test-taking strategies.
You’ll see about two graph sets, each of which will be followed by two or three questions. The graphs that show up on the GRE are those that are most commonly used in everyday life: bar, line, and pie charts, which are often combined with information tables. The most successful test takers will learn how to read a graph so that they can focus on the data that they need and not waste time with all the extraneous data that a graph provides.
Analytical Writing Section
The Analytical Writing section allows schools to evaluate your academic writing ability. The Analytical Writing section must be written on the computer. You will use a simple word processing program. The essays will then be sent to graders who will determine your Analytical Writing score at a later date.
The writing assessment consists of two timed essay sections. The first is what ETS calls an “Issue” essay. You’ll be shown two essay topics—each a sentence or paragraph that expresses an opinion on an issue of general interest. You’ll be asked to choose one of the two topics, and then you’ll be given 45 minutes to plan and write an essay that communicates your own view on the issue. Whether you agree or disagree with the opinion provided is irrelevant: What matters is that you back up your view with relevant examples and statements.
The second of the two writing tasks is the “Argument” essay, which is somewhat different. This time, you will be shown a paragraph that argues a certain point. You will then be given 30 minutes to assess the argument’s logic. As with the “Issue” essay, it won’t matter whether you agree with the information provided.
The official score report you receive, and which ETS will send to the graduate schools you choose, will contain five separate scores: both a scaled score and a percentile score for the Quantitative and Verbal sections of the test (the scaled score lies on a 200-800 scale), and your score on the Analytical Writing section. (See chapter 6 for details on how the Writing section is scored.) You’ll receive your unofficial Quantitative and Verbal scores on the computer immediately after you take the exam. Some Schools will look at your scores for all three sections, while others will look at scores for only one or two. Check with the schools in which you are interested before you start studying. Also bear in mind that while some programs only look at one or two scores, applications for financial aid may be dependent on all your GRE scores.
NUMBERS GAME
You can’t score higher than 800 or lower than 200 on either the Verbal or the Quantitative section. The Writing section is scored separately on a scale from 0–6.
Each of these scores will be accompanied by a percentile ranking, showing the percentage of test takers who scored below you. An improvement in your percentile ranking can often mean the difference between choosing from the top graduate programs and from less prestigious programs.
The GRE is administered at many special computerized testing centers six days a week during regular business hours. To register to take the GRE, go to www.gre.org. You can download the most recent GRE Information and Resource Bulletin, which is published by ETS every summer for the forthcoming academic year.
The CAT format takes some getting used to—in fact, it’s pretty weird at first. Here’s how it works. You will see only one question at a time. Instead of having a predetermined mixture of basic, medium, and hard questions, the computer will select questions for you based on how well you are doing.
The first question will be of medium difficulty. If you get it right, the second question will be selected from a large pool of questions that are a little harder; if you get the first question wrong, the second will be a little more basic.
If you keep getting questions right, the test will get harder and harder; if you slip and make some mistakes, the test will adjust and start giving you easier problems, but if you answer them correctly, it will go back to the hard ones. Ideally, the test gives you enough questions to ensure that scores are not based on luck. If you get one hard question right, you might just have been lucky, but if you get ten hard questions right, then luck has little to do with it. So the test is self-adjusting and self-correcting.
Because of this format, the GRE CAT is very different structurally from the paper-based test. After the first problem, every problem that you see is based on how you answered the prior problem. That means you cannot return to a question once you’ve answered it, because that would throw off the sequence. Once you answer a question, it’s part of your score, for better or worse. That means you can’t skip around within a section and do questions in the order that you like.
Another major consequence of the CAT format is that hard problems count more than easy ones. It has to be this way, because the very purpose of this adaptive format is to find out at what level you reliably get about half the questions right; that’s your scoring level.
Imagine two students: one who does ten basic questions, half of which she gets right and half of which she gets wrong, and one who does ten very difficult questions, half of which she gets right and half of which she gets wrong. The same number of questions have been answered correctly in each case, but this does not reflect an equal ability on the part of the two students.
In fact, the student who answered five out of ten very difficult questions incorrectly could still get a very high score on the GRE CAT. But in order to get to these hard questions, she first had to get medium-difficulty questions right.
What this means for you is that no matter how much more comfortable you might be sticking to the basic questions, you definitely want to get to the hard questions if you can, because that means your score will be higher.
HOW SHOULD I ATTACK THE VERBAL SECTION?
In the chapters that follow, we’ll cover techniques for answering various types of questions that you can expect to see on the Verbal section of the GRE. But you’ll also need strategies for managing a section as a whole. Here are some strategies for attacking a section of the GRE CAT.
Be Systematic
Because it’s so important to get to the hard questions as early as possible, work systematically at the beginning of a GRE CAT section. Use scratch paper to organize your thinking. If you eliminate choices, cross them off and guess intelligently. Invest the necessary time to try to answer the first few questions correctly. You must, however, leave enough time to mark an answer for every question in the section. You will be penalized for questions you don’t reach.
THE ART OF USING SCRATCH PAPER
Developing a systematic, organized way to use your scratch paper will help you save time and eliminate mistakes.
Draw a Grid
If crossing off answer choices on paper tests really helps to clarify your thinking (using a process of elimination), you may want to consider making a grid on your scratch paper before you begin the CAT. Use it to mark off answer choices that you have eliminated, as shown below. That way you can tell at a glance which answer choices are still in the running. If you end up using it often, it’ll be worth the ten seconds it takes to draw a simple grid, like this one:
Pace Yourself
Of course, the last thing you want to happen is to have time called before you’ve done half the questions. It’s essential, therefore, that you pace yourself, keeping in mind the general guidelines for how long to spend on any individual question or passage.
No one is saying that you should spend, for instance, exactly 90 seconds on every Antonym question. But you should have a sense of how long you have to do each question, so you know when you’re exceeding the limit and should start to move faster. You’ll develop this sense if you time yourself while working on practice GRE questions.
Stop the Clock
The timer in the corner can work to your advantage, but if you find yourself looking at it so frequently that it becomes a distraction, you should turn it off for 10 or 15 minutes and try to refocus your attention on the test, even if you lose track of time somewhat. The CAT rewards focus and accuracy much more than it does speed.
Don’t Waste Time on Questions You Can’t Do
We know that foregoing a possibly tough question is easier said than done; we all have the natural instinct to plow through test sections, answering every question as it appears. But it just doesn’t pay off on the GRE CAT. If you dig in your heels on a tough question, refusing to move on until you’ve cracked it, you’re getting in the way of your test score. Like life itself, a test section is too short to waste on lost causes.
IT’S SUPPOSED TO BE TOUGH
No matter how good you are at standardized tests, the CAT is designed to find the level at which you find questions hard. Thus, everybody should think the CAT is difficult.
Remain Calm
It’s imperative that you remain calm and composed while working through a section. You can’t allow yourself to be rattled by one hard question or Reading Comprehension passage to the degree that it throws off your performance on the rest of the Verbal section. Expect to find some difficult questions, but remember, you won’t be the only one encountering difficult problems. The test is designed to challenge everyone who takes it. Having trouble with a difficult question isn’t going to ruin your score, but getting upset about it and letting it throw you off track will. When you understand that part of the test maker’s goal is to reward those who keep their composure, you’ll recognize the importance of not panicking when you run into challenging material.
HOW DO I MOVE AROUND ON THE CAT?
Let’s preview the primary computer functions that you will use to move around on the CAT. ETS calls them “testing tools,” but they’re basically just boxes that you can click with your mouse. The screen below is typical for an adaptive test.
Here’s what the various buttons do.
The Time Button
Clicking on this button turns the time display at the top of the screen on and off. When you have five minutes left in a section, the clock flashes and the display changes from Hours/Minutes to Hours/ Minutes/Seconds.
The Exit Button
This allows you to exit the section before the time is up. If you budget your time wisely, you should never have to use this button—time will run out just as you are finishing the section.
The Help Button
This one leads to directions and other stuff from the tutorial. You should know all this already, and besides, the test clock won’t pause just because you click on Help.
NO SKIPPING AROUND
You can’t skip questions on the GRE CAT; you have to answer every question you get. But you do get more time per question on the CAT than on the formerly offered paper-and-pencil test.
The Quit Button
Hitting this button ends the test.
The Next Button
Hit this when you want to move on to the next question.
After you press Next, you must hit Confirm.
The Confirm Button
This button tells the computer you are happy with your answer and are really ready to move to the next question. You cannot proceed until you have hit this button.
The Scroll Bar
Similar to the scroll bar on a Windows-style computer display, the scroll bar is a thin, vertical column with up and down arrows at the top and bottom. Clicking on the arrows moves you up or down the page you’re reading.
There are both good and annoying things about the GRE CAT. The following are a few things you should be thankful for or watch out for as you prepare to try your luck on the test.
Eight Good Things about the CAT
1. There is a little timer at the top of the computer screen to help you pace yourself (you can hide it if it distracts you).
2. There will be only a few other test takers in the room with you—it won’t be like taking it in one of those massive lecture halls with distractions everywhere.
3. You get a pause of five minutes between each section. The pause is optional, but you should always use it to relax and stretch.
4. You can sign up for the CAT two days before the test, and registration is very easy.
5. The CAT is much more convenient for your schedule than the pencil-and-paper exam was. It’s offered at more than 175 centers three to six days a week (depending on the center) all year long.
6. The CAT gives you more time to spend on each question than you got on the paper-based test.
7. You can see your scores before you decide which schools you want to send them to.
8. Perhaps the CAT’s best feature is that it gives you your scores immediately and will send them to schools just 10 to 15 days later.
NO DISTRACTIONS
One advantage of the GRE CAT is that it gives you the chance to work methodically on one question at a time with no other questions there to distract you.
Seven Annoying Things about the CAT
1. You cannot skip around on this test; you must answer the questions one at a time in the order the computer gives them to you.
2. If you realize later that you answered a question incorrectly, you can’t go back and change your answer.
3. If the person next to you is noisy or distracting, the proctor cannot move you or the person, since your test is on the computer.
4. You can’t cross off an answer choice and never look at it again, so you have to be disciplined about not reconsidering choices you’ve already eliminated.
5. You have to scroll through reading comprehension passages, which means you won’t be able to see the whole thing on the screen at once.
6. You can’t write on your computer screen the way you can on a paper test (though some have tried), so you have to use the scratch paper they give you, which will be inconveniently located away from the computer screen.
7. Lastly, many people find that computer screens tire them and cause eyestrain—especially after four hours.
Chapter 2: GRE Sentence Completion
Of all the GRE Verbal question types, Sentence Completions are probably the most student-friendly. Unlike Analogies and Antonyms, Sentence Completions provide you with a context to help you figure out tough vocabulary. And unlike Reading Comprehension questions, they only require you to read one sentence at a time. As the name suggests, Sentence Completion questions test your ability to complete sentences that are missing one or two key words by selecting the appropriate answer choice.
The directions for this section look like this:
Directions: This sentence has one or more blank spaces. Each blank indicates that a word or phrase has been omitted. Of the five following words or sets of words, choose the one word or set that, when inserted in the sentence, best fits the meaning of the entire sentence.
The difficulty of the sentence completions you will see on the GRE depends on how many questions you get right. If you perform well on the Verbal Section, you will find that the later sentence completions you encounter involve tougher vocabulary and more convoluted logic.
To improve your skill in answering GRE sentence completions, you’ll need to familiarize yourself with the basic principles for approaching them—and you’ll need some practice. The Four Fundamentals below will help you to increase your skills and confidence as you approach Test Day. And with skills and confidence, you’ll be able to earn points on the GRE!
Every Clue Is Right in Front of You
Each sentence contains a few crucial clues that help you to determine the meaning of the missing word(s). Clues in the sentence limit the possible answers, and finding these clues will guide you to the correct answer.
What are the important clues in the following question?
1. Although she earned her fame for her striking murals, the artist felt that her sculpture merited greater ______.
1 disdain
2 acclaim
3 deliberation
4 viewing
5 publicity
Here, the word although is a classic structural clue. It tells you that you can expect a change of direction in the sentence. The first half tells you that the artist became famous as a muralist, but that she thought her sculpture deserved more BLANK. The word although tells you that she must think her sculptures are even better than her murals, and that they merit more praise, or acclaim.
Look for What’s Directly Implied and Expect Clichés
We’re not dealing with poetry here. These sentences aren’t excerpted from the works of Toni Morrison or William Faulkner. The correct answer is the one most directly implied by the meanings of the words in the sentence. Very often, for example, the definition of the missing word is provided in the sentence:
2. Because Gould’s theory has been neither completely rejected nor completely accepted by the scientific community, its status remains ______ .
1 repudiated
2 sanctioned
3 quizzical
4 preferable
5 debatable
Here, choice (5), debatable, means “neither completely rejected nor completely accepted.”
Sometimes you can choose the correct answer because the missing words are part of familiar-sounding phrases or because they simply sound right in the context of the sentence:
3. The increasing acceptance of the notion that the news media is not a(n) ______ commentator upon events, but rather, a mouthpiece for the vested interests of its powerful owners, demonstrates the public’s growing ______ large corporations.
1 disinterested…mistrust of
2 meddlesome…suspicion of
3 official…apprehension of
4 impartial…satisfaction with
5 manipulative…confusion with
In the above example, the correct answer, choice (1), works because the phrases disinterested commentator and growing mistrust of simply sound correct.
Look for “Structural Road Signs”
Some words such as since, however, or because—give clues to the structure of the sentence that will point you to the right answer. The following are road signs found in GRE CAT sentence completions:
Straight-Ahead Road Signs
These make one part of the sentence support or elaborate on another part. They continue the sentence in the same direction. Examples include and, similarly, in addition, since, also, thus, because, ; (semicolon), and likewise.
Detour Road Signs
These words indicate a change in the direction of the sentence. They make one part of the sentence contradict or qualify another part. Examples include but, despite, yet, however, unless, rather, although, while, unfortunately, and nonetheless.
Watch Out for Common Wrong-Answer Types
If you get stumped on any GRE CAT Sentence Completion, you can still earn points by using the process of elimination. Do this by ruling out as many wrong answer choices as you can, and then picking from the remaining choices. Here are some common wrong answer types to look out for:
Half-Right/Half-Wrong
In a sentence that contains two blanks, one of the two words provided in a given answer choice fits while the other one doesn’t. Make sure that both words fit the context of the sentence!
Au Contraire
In a sentence that contains one blank, the word in the given answer choice means exactly the opposite of the word you’re looking for.
Clunkers
The word(s) in a given answer choice simply do not sound right in the context of the sentence.
FILL IN THE BLANK
When working through a Sentence Completion question:
• Look for clues in the sentence
• Focus on what’s directly implied
• Pay attention to “structural road signs”
MORE STRATEGIES FOR SENTENCE COMPLETION QUESTIONS
Look for Keywords: Keywords are descriptive words or phrases that clue you in to the missing words in a sentence. Unlike road signs, where a small set of words tells you a sentence’s direction, keywords will reflect its theme, give you a sense of its logic, or provide clues to the author’s intent. For example, if “ambivalent” is a keyword in the sentence, and it’s followed by a negative sentiment, it is likely pointing to a positive word in the answer choices.
Paraphrase Long or Complex Sentences: You may encounter a sentence that, because of its length or structure, is hard to get a handle on. When faced with a complex sentence like this, put it in your own words. If you can sum up 44 words in 14, it’s easier to find the right answer.
Use Word Roots: If you can’t figure out the meaning of a word, take a look at its root to try to get close to its meaning. (In the back of this book, you’ll find the Latin and Greek roots of many common GRE words.) Etymology can often provide clues to meaning, especially when you couple a root definition with the word in context.
Pick up a copy Kaplan’s GRE guide to get more practice for the Verbal Section question types and to see examples of these tips in action.
Drill
In the following examples, test your knowledge of Sentence Completion road signs by selecting the word that most correctly completes the sentence:
1. The singer’s lyrics were quite lovely, but her vocal tone was extremely (harsh, melodious).
2. Fred was so annoyed with his publicist that he repeatedly (praised, lambasted) him in public.
3. Because Mabel had the reputation of being a mediocre cook, most believed her chances of winning the bake-off were (good, slim).
4. Despite the fact that the racehorse’s performance in recent competitions had been disappointing, the oddsmakers were predicting a (win, disappointment) at the Derby.
5. Many felt the rules for the scholarship competition had been unfair and, furthermore, the judges were (biased, fair).
6. Although they appear quite cuddly, brown bears actually pose a large (threat, attraction) to tourists.
THE KAPLAN FOUR-STEP METHOD FOR SENTENCE COMPLETION
Now that you have learned the basics, you’re ready to learn Kaplan’s strategic approach to Sentence Completions on the GRE CAT. Approaching Sentence Completions in a systematic manner is the best way to avoid common pitfalls and improve your score.
Read the whole sentence.
• Look for road signs to help you determine what type of word you’re looking for.
• If the sentence is long or clumsy, rephrase the sentence in your own words.
Predict an answer.
• In two-blank questions, try to predict for both blanks.
• Use the road signs and logic you found in Step 1 to determine the direction in which the sentence is heading.
Scan the answer choices, choosing the one that best fits your prephrase.
• Look for those that match your prediction.
• Eliminate answer choices that don’t come close to your prediction.
• On two-blank sentences, work with one blank at a time, eliminating answer choices as you go.
Read your selected answer choice back into the sentence.
• If it makes sense, you have a winner.
• If it doesn’t make sense, go back to the answer choices and find one that works better.
• If you get stuck, eliminate answer choices that you know are wrong and guess among the remaining choices.
Try It Out
Let’s apply the Kaplan Four-Step Method for Sentence Completions to an example.
4. We will face the idea of old age with ________ as long as we believe that it invariably brings poverty, isolation, and illness.
1 regret
2 apprehension
3 enlightenment
4 veneration
5 reverence
Let’s begin by reading the whole sentence strategically. Immediately note the structural clue as long as. This phrase will tell us what to expect when we prepare to fill in the blank. The sentence tells us that old age brings poverty, isolation, and illness. Naturally, therefore, we would face it with something like “fear.”
Now it’s time to predict our answer. As we decided in Step 1, we should look in the answer choices for a word that means fear.
Here’s where we scan the answer choices and look for one that best fits our predicted answer. Apprehension means “fear,” so choice (2) is our best answer. But let’s eliminate some answers that we know are wrong, just to be sure. Choice 1, regret, is tempting, but you feel regret for something that has already happened, not for something you will face in the future. Veneration and reverence both mean “great respect,” so we can eliminate choices 4 and 5, too.
Now we’ll plug our answer into the sentence: We will face the idea of old age with apprehension as long as we believe that it invariably brings poverty, isolation, and illness. This sentence certainly makes sense, so we have found our winner
Now try the following Sentence Completion questions on your own, using the Kaplan Four-Step Method. Time yourself: Give yourself a maximum of 30–45 seconds to do each example.
1. Despite much informed ________, the relationship between sunspot cycles and the earth’s weather remains ________.
1 argument . . . decisive
2 confusion . . . tenuous
3 conjecture . . . ambiguous
4 evidence . . . clear
5 analysis . . . systematic
2. As a consequence of the Antarctic’s ________ climate, the only forms of plant life to be found in the continent’s interior are a few ________ lichens and mosses that cling to the frozen rocks.
1 frigid . . . hardy
2 extreme . . . mysterious
3 harsh . . . luxuriant
4 freezing . . . complex
5 changing . . . tiny
3. Conflict between generations may be a problem that has persisted for centuries, but the nature and intensity of the conflict obviously ________ in response to changes in social and economic conditions.
1 increases
2 disappears
3 declines
4 varies
5 wanes
Think about how you solved these Sentence Completion questions. To maximize your score, it’s important to start practicing the techniques we covered in this chapter. On the pages that follow, you’ll find sets of GRE Sentence Completion practice questions that will help you to hone your skills with this question type. Try these practice sets under testlike conditions, moving from one question to the next at a rapid pace. Complete, strategic explanations to all of these questions follow so that you can check your answers and learn the most efficient means for completing each question correctly.
Testlike Questions
1. (2)
2. (5)
3. (1)
Drill
1. harsh
2.lambasted
3. slim
4. win
5. biased
6. threat
Practice Set
1. (3)
2. (1)
3. (4)
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: Each sentence has one or more blank spaces. Each blank indicates that a word or phrase has been omitted. Of the five following words or sets of words, choose the one word or set that, when inserted in the sentence, best fits the meaning of the entire sentence.
1. Male sperm whales are normally________creatures; however, when they are jealously guarding their territory, they have been known to ships.
1 docile . . . attack
2 aggressive . . . strike
3 large . . . assault
4 peaceful . . . ignore
5 powerful . . . assail
2. The ______ genius of the late Glenn Gould is apparent in this imaginative for piano of Wagner’s “Siegfried Idyll,” which the composer originally scored for full orchestra and presented to his wife Cosima on her birthday.
1 ineluctable . . . diminution
2 exceptional . . . music
3 incommensurate . . . homage
4 unmistakable . . . adaptation
5 brilliant . . . celebration
3. Opponents of affirmative action by quota, the practice of hiring on the basis of race or sex as well as______, maintain that both the hired and the rejected suffer______when not judged on their abilities alone.
1 loyalty . . . prejudice
2 status . . . nepotism
3 competence . . . injustice
4 creed . . . indignity
5 dexterity . . . degradation
4. An ancient and mythopoeic neurological disorder, epilepsy is_______in part by the sensation of intense and altered consciousness doctors call an “aura,” which_____ the epileptic seconds before a seizure.
1 neutralized . . . overcomes
2 characterized . . . grips
3 obviated . . . afflicts
4 enhanced . . . debilitates
5 diagnosed . . . proselytizes
5. Although the European Economic Community was established to_______the economic growth of all its member nations equally, some express_______at what they claim is their unfair burden in maintaining the organization.
1 regulate . . . favoritism
2 retard . . . vehemence
3 promote . . . resentment
4 measure . . . irritation
5 aid . . . wrongfulness
6. Those who make up their minds that life should be a succession of triumphs are soon enlightened by_______reality; even money can_______the truth only briefly.
1 stark . . . defuse
2 bland . . . quench
3 dread . . . encourage
4 limpid . . . hold back
5 harsh . . . stave off
7. In 1921, Antioch College adopted a policy requiring students to_______beyond their stacks of books and contribute their talents to the working world in order to earn their bachelor’s degrees.
1 rise
2 venture
3 probe
4 excel
5 strut
8. The candidate announced, to the______of her devoted campaigners, that unless her performance in the polls improved she would_______the race.
1 consternation . . . withdraw from
2 bewilderment . . . abstain from
3 mortification . . . continue
4 delight . . . step out of
5 awe . . . renounce
9. The_____private contributions for disease research creates_______; the money goes for research into the best-publicized disease, which is not always the most serious or widespread one.
1 lack of . . . a reallocation
2 need for . . . a nuisance
3 infirmity in . . . a debt
4 colloquialism of . . . a paradox
5 indispensability of . . . a disparity
10. Her charisma was a double-edged sword; in her friends, it aroused both admiration and______ .
1 envy
2 laudation
3 equanimity
4 obstinacy
5 affection
1. Choice (1)
The first blank here will be filled with a word that describes what type of creatures male sperm whales normally are. The “detour” road sign however between these clauses indicates that a contrasting point will be made. What we learn in the first clause will be different from that in the second. So, these whales are normally something, but sometimes can be different. A clue in the second clause helps us figure this one out. In the second clause, we learn that something happens when the whales are jealously guarding their territory. They probably act aggressively or violently when guarding their territory, so the first blank will be a contrast to this. It must suggest that the whales are not normally violent. The second blank will be filled with a word that tells us what the whales do to ships when they are guarding their territory.
A good prephrase for this answer would be, “These whales are normally peaceful creatures; however, when guarding their territory, they have been known to sink ships.”
Starting with the first blank, two choices look good right away, (1) and (4). Choice (1) also looks good for the second blank, while the second word in (4) is the opposite of what we need. We’ll hold onto (1) and quickly check the others. In choice (2), the words are not contradictory. An aggressive whale would normally strike ships. We need a pair of words that is opposite in meaning. Choices (3) and (5) can be eliminated because each is a descriptive word that relates to the whale’s physical characteristics rather than to its temperament.
Male sperm whales are normally docile creatures; however, when they are jealously guarding their territory, they have been known to attack ships.
2. Choice (4)
There are several good clues to work with in this sentence. The first blank describes a type of genius that is apparent in Gould’s work, so the first blank will be a positive word reinforcing the notion of genius. The second blank is described as being imaginative and for the piano. Later in the sentence we find that originally, the piece was scored for a full orchestra. Gould must have changed it, in an imaginative way, so it would be for piano only.
A good prephrase here would be, “Gould’s amazing genius is apparent in this imaginative version of the musical piece.”
The first blank seems easier to work with, so we’ll start there. Choices (2), (4), and (5) have strongly positive words for the first blank. For the second blank we predicted “version.” Of these three choices, only (4), adaptation, is a good match for the second blank. This is probably our answer. Choices (2) and (5) can be eliminated because the second word in each does not convey the meaning at the end of the sentence that a change had been made. Choices (1) and (3) don’t work because the first word in each is not positive. Ineluctable means “inevitable,” which is not very positive in this context, and incommensurate means “inadequate,” which is not positive at all.
The unmistakable genius of the late Glenn Gould is apparent in this imaginative adaptation for piano of Wagner’s “Siegfried Idyll,” which the composer originally scored for full orchestra and presented to his wife Cosima on her birthday.
3. Choice (3)
For the first blank, there are a couple of clues to pay attention to. It falls in a part of the sentence set off with commas. This means that the phrase is defining what affirmative action by quota is. The road sign as well as right before the blank tells us that there is a basis upon which people are being hired other than race or sex. Since the end of the sentence states that people suffer when they are not judged on their abilities alone, the third quality, the first missing word must mean “their abilities alone.” The second blank will have a negative connotation, since the opponents believe that people suffer from it.
A prephrase of this answer might be, “Opponents of affirmative action by quota, hiring based on race or sex as well as abilities, feel that everyone suffers discrimination when not judged on just their abilities.”
Our prediction for the first blank is more definitive, so we’ll start there. The only answer that comes close to our prediction is choice (3). Both the first and second words fit perfectly, so this looks like the right answer. We’ll scan the other choices just to be sure. We can rule the others out quickly because none of the words for the first blank in choices (1), (2), (4), or (5) means “their abilities alone.”
Opponents of affirmative action by quota, the practice of hiring on the basis of race or sex as well as competence, maintain that both the hired and the rejected suffer injustice when not judged on their abilities alone.
4. Choice (2)
The clues in this sentence are subtle. Don’t be distracted by the hard word mythopoeic, which means “giving rise to myths.” It does not affect the direction in which the sentence is going; in fact, the whole first part of the sentence before the first comma is irrelevant. The part of the sentence with the first blank tells us that doctors have noted that an “aura” accompanies epilepsy. So the first blank must link the “aura” to the condition. The part of the sentence around the second blank tells us that an “aura” does something to the epileptic before a seizure; we can assume that it will be something bad, so the second blank should be negative.
A good prephrase for these blanks would be, “Epilepsy is discovered or diagnosed or accompanied in part by an aura that effects the epileptic seconds before the seizure.”
The second blank is more precise here. Unfortunately, all of the answer choices work in the second blank except (5). We’ll eliminate (5) and evaluate the others closely. Now that (5) is out, the only answer that is logical for the first blank is choice (2), characterized. Choices (1) and (4) do not make sense for the first blank; nor does (3), obviated, which means “to prevent.”
An ancient and mythopoeic neurological disorder, epilepsy is characterized in part by the sensation of intense and altered consciousness doctors call an “aura,”which grips the epileptic seconds before seizure.
5. Choice (3)
The road sign although at the beginning of this sentence acts as a “detour.” It signals a change in direction between the first and second halves of the sentence. In the first part, we’re told that the goal is to do something to the growth of all of the member nations equally. No doubt this is a positive word; an organization would not be established to hinder the growth of all the members of the group. The second blank tells us that some nations believe they unfairly bear a greater burden for running the organization and are expressing some type of feeling about this. The second blank must be a negative word that has to do with what they are feeling.
A prephrase for this sentence might be, “Although the EEC was established to encourage the growth of all its members, some express anger or discontent or dismay that they share more of a burden for the organization.”
We’ll start with the first blank since it’s more precise. Right away the positive words in choices (3) and (5) look good for the first blank. For the second blank, (3) works much better than (5). It is logical that the members would express resentment over the unfair burden, while it would be redundant to say they express wrongfulness over the injustice. Something that is unfair is, after all, “wrong.” We’ll hold onto (3) and check the others. Choice (2) can be eliminated right away because it is negative. The ECC would not want to retard the growth of its members. Choices (1) and (4) are neither positive nor negative, so neither would be a good choice, unless nothing else worked, which is not the case here.
Although the European Economic Community was established to promote the economic growth of all its member nations equally, some express resentment at what they claim is their unfair burden in maintaining the organization.
6. Choice (5)
The first blank describes the word reality, and we learn that this type of reality makes people reconsider their idealistic belief that life is only a succession of triumphs. Since they expect something overly optimistic, the reality of the situation will be a letdown for them. The word describing reality will, therefore, have a negative meaning. A “straight-ahead” road sign, a semicolon, connects these two clauses. Consequently, the second clause will reinforce the same concept found in the first. In the second clause, the truth is that this overly optimistic belief is unrealistic. Money will have some type of impact on the truth only briefly, we’re told. Since money has this effect only briefly, and then the harsh truth will set in, this clause must be suggesting that money will “put off” or “hide” the truth for only a short time.
A prephrase of this answer might be, “Idealistic people are soon faced with grim reality; even money can hide or help them avoid the truth only briefly.”
The first blank is more concrete, so we’ll start with it. Choices (1) and (5) look the best for the first blank. Choice (1) doesn’t work for the second blank, though, because defuse would mean that the truth will be calmed or lessened by money. Money doesn’t just defuse the truth for a while. It actually covers up the truth. So, (5) works much better for both blanks. We’ll hold onto it and check the rest. We can eliminate choices (2) and (4), since the first word in each is not negative. Due to the second blank, choice (3) can be eliminated, because it doesn’t convey the meaning that money can only hide the truth for a while.
Those who make up their minds that life should be a succession of triumphs are soon enlightened by a harsh reality; even money can stave off the truth only briefly.
7. Choice (2)
The two clues to figuring out the correct answer here are the word beyond right after the blank and the general meaning of the sentence. There are some words that won’t sound right with the preposition beyond, so any choice that makes logical sense, stating that the students are going beyond regular studies, must be double-checked with beyond.
Any word that means “going beyond” will work here.
The choice that looks good right away is (2), venture, which means “brave the unknown,” because it has the meaning we want and sounds fine with the word beyond following it. We’ll hold onto it and quickly check the others. Choice (1) doesn’t work because the correct idiomatic expression is “rise above,” not rise beyond. Plus, there is no indication in the sentence that the school thinks one experience is superior, or above, the other. Both are necessary to graduate. Choices (3) and (5) do not work well. To probe something is to examine it. We usually say “probe into” something and not probe beyond it. The notion that the students would strut beyond their studies has a negative connotation, so that doesn’t work. The school would certainly want them to do something positive. Choice (4) can be eliminated because it is not idiomatically correct. Students wouldn’t excel beyond their studies. The school would probably want them to excel at both, in any case.
In 1921, Antioch College adopted a policy requiring students to venture beyond their stacks of books and contribute their talents to the working world in order to earn their bachelor’s degrees.
8. Choice (1)
The road sign unless tells us that a “detour” or contrast is coming in the sentence. Therefore, we can predict that unless her performance improves, she would have to do something different from what she is doing now. This would no doubt not be what her campaigners would want to hear, since they support her and would want her to win. The second blank will describe a change from what she is doing now, campaigning, and the first blank will be a somewhat negative word describing how her followers will feel if she stops campaigning.
A good prephrase for this sentence would be, “The candidate announced, to the dismay of her campaigners, that unless things got better she would drop out of the race.”
Starting with the second blank (since our prediction has less room for change in it), we can narrow it down to choices (1) and (4) right away. The first word in choice (1) looks good, too, so we’ll hold onto this one and check the others. Choice (4) can be eliminated because the first word is positive. Choice (2) is out because it is not idiomatically correct. We don’t say that someone would abstain from a race, and most likely the campaigners would not be filled with bewilderment or confusion about this announcement. There would be no reason for them to feel bewildered if she decided to quit when she was behind in the polls. They would be disappointed, but not bewildered. Choice (3) does not make sense because the second word, continue, would not be a contrast with what she is doing now. Choice (5) can be eliminated because the first word is positive.
The candidate announced, to the consternation of her devoted campaigners, that unless her performance in the polls improved she would withdraw from the race.
9. Choice (5)
Since both blanks occur in the first of two clauses, it’s most likely the second clause that will provide most of the clues we need. We should note immediately that the two clauses are joined by a semicolon, a “straight-ahead” road sign, which tells us that the two sentences will be consistent in meaning. The ideas in both will be similar and support each other. In the second clause, we learn that privately contributed money is given to the best publicized cause, not always to the one that is most serious. This would be a real problem for researchers. If they had enough money, they would no doubt work on the most serious problems first, no matter what cause the public donated to. Instead, their research priorities are determined not by need but by popular support. It must be that contributions are limited, and the researchers are forced to spend time on the popular causes first.
A prephrase of this answer could be, “The need for private contributions creates a problem for researchers.”
Three choices, (1), (2), and (5), look pretty good for the first blank. Choice (1) does not work because the words for the second blank are not supported by the original sentence. There is no indication in the first or second clause that the money is being reallocated, or simply “shifted,” from one cause to the other. It is being given to one cause and not to the other. The second word in choice (2), nuisance, is not strong enough, given what we know. Nuisance makes it sound like this is a minor issue, when in fact we were told that the money does not go to the most serious or widespread disease. This would be more than a minor issue. In choice (5), disparity is a much better choice for the second blank, since it indicates an unfair situation. This looks like pretty good answer as for both blanks, but we’ll check the remaining choices to be sure. Choices (3) and (4) can be eliminated because the words for the first blank do not express the need for or reliance upon private contributions.
The indispensability of private contributions for disease research creates a disparity; the money goes for research into the best-publicized disease, which is not always the most serious or widespread one.
10. Choice (1)
A major road sign here is the semicolon between the two clauses, signaling a continuation or consistency between the two parts. If her charisma is a double-edged sword, then it has contrasting points—good aspects and bad aspects. The clause after the semicolon will elaborate on or give an example of these conflicting sides. In the second clause, we find that even in those who like her, her charisma arouses admiration, which would be the good side of the sword, and something else, which must be the bad side. This blank must be filled in with a negative word.
A prephrase here might be, “Her charisma provoked both admiration and dislike in her friends.”
Only two choices here have negative meanings, (1) and (4). Choice (1) makes the most sense, since charisma could easily invoke envy in others, and that would definitely be a negative side to her charisma. Choice (4), obstinacy, is negative but means “stubbornness”; this answer does not make sense in the sentence. Choice (1) looks like the right answer; the remaining three choices can be ruled out because they are positive in meaning. Choice (2), laudation, means “praise”; (3), equanimity, means “even-tempered”; and (5), affection, has a very positive meaning.
Her charisma was a double-edged sword; in her friends, it aroused both admiration and envy.
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: Each sentence has one or more blank spaces. Each blank indicates that a word or phrase has been omitted. Of the five following words or sets of words, choose the one word or set that, when inserted in the sentence, best fits the meaning of the entire sentence.
1. The composition of that painting is so______and direct that the casual observer might think that it did not require much______.
1 regimented . . . talent
2 complex . . . skill
3 beautiful . . . feeling
4 simple . . . thought
5 emotional . . . consideration
2. Filmed on a ludicrously______budget and edited at breakneck speed, Melotti’s documentary nonetheless______the Cannes critics with its trenchancy and verve.
1 low . . . disappointed
2 inflated . . . distracted
3 uneven . . . amused
4 disproportionate . . . appalled
5 inadequate . . . surprised
3. The______of the desert explains why so many Egyptian mummies are still intact, whereas humidity of the tombs in tropical rain forests supports the agents of decay so that few Aztec mummies have_______.
1 heat . . . survived
2 aridity . . . endured
3 anhydration . . . decayed
4 barrenness . . . proliferated
5 seclusion . . . surfaced
4. They_____until there was no recourse but to______a desperate, last-minute solution to the problem.
1 berated . . . try
2 delayed . . . envision
3 procrastinated . . . implement
4 debated . . . maintain
5 filibustered . . . reject
5. The Wankel Rotary Engine was an engineering marvel that substantially reduced automobile exhaust emissions, but because it was less fuel-efficient than the standard piston-cylinder engine, it was______in the early 1970s when______pollution gave way to panic over fuel shortages.
1 needed . . . disillusionment with
2 conceived . . . attention on
3 modified . . . opinion on
4 abandoned . . . preoccupation with
5 discarded . . . interest in
6. Friendship, no matter how_____, has its boundaries;_______advice, when thrust insistently upon one, is rarely an act of friendship, regardless of the adviser’s intent.
1 cool . . . contradictory
2 enjoyable . . . obverse
3 intimate . . . unsolicited
4 distant . . . marital
5 special . . . desired
7. Anarchists contend that government is by definition the repression of natural human desire, and their_____rivals concur; it is over______the of this definition that the two groups battle.
1 sympathetic . . . phraseology
2 perennial . . . semantics
3 ideological . . . implications
4 fascistic . . . expression
5 fiercest . . . etiology
8. Despite generous helpings of______from a group of______critics, this iconoclastic poet’s three volumes have sold steadily.
1 zeal . . . hidebound
2 mockery . . . obscure
3 tedium . . . respected
4 abuse . . . ineffectual
5 vitriol . . . influential
9. Because the different components of the film industry were “vertically” oriented—arranged so that all______, from production to projection, were held by one company—it was______that monopolistic practices would arise.
1 opportunities for control . . . inevitable
2 burdens of business . . . understandable
3 exercises of power . . . appropriate
4 means of solicitation . . . predictable
5 perquisites of commerce . . . unsavory
10. From the_____that the peasants tried to conceal as they knelt before the body of the dictator’s son, I concluded that, far from affection, it was_____that had brought them to the wake.
1 hatred . . . sarcasm
2 reticence . . . violence
3 diligence . . . adulation
4 trepidation . . . fear
5 sorrow . . . patriotism
1. Choice (4)
The “straight-ahead” road sign and after the blank tells us that the missing word and the word direct will support each other. They both describe the composition of a painting, and the correct choice will be consistent with the word direct. For the second blank, there are a couple of clues to notice. We’re told that the casual observer might think something about the painting. You wouldn’t expect a casual observer to be very thorough or perceptive. The casual observer might mistakenly assume that the way the painting seemed initially, with its direct composition, indicates that it didn’t require much from the artist.
A prephrase of this answer is easier for the first blank, but several words would work in the second. A partial prephrase might be, “The composition is so simple and direct that the casual observer might think it didn’t require much from the artist.”
Choice (4) immediately looks good because the first word is a perfect match. The second word, thought, makes sense, too, so we’ll hold onto this one while we check the others. Choice (2) can be eliminated because the first word, complex, is contrary to direct. These two words could not be joined by a “straight-ahead” road sign like and. Choices (1), (3), and (5) are not good for the first blank because each of these words does not support or elaborate upon the meaning of direct, which is what we expect since the two words will be joined by and. Something that is regimented, beautiful, or emotional may or may not be “direct.” There is no clear connection.
The composition of that painting is so simple and direct that the casual observer might think that it did not require much thought.
2. Choice (5)
The first blank describes what type of budget the film had. The road sign and after the word budget tells us that the budget and the rate at which it was edited are equal elements in the sentence. In other words, one is not positive while the other is negative. They would both be positive or both be negative. Consequently, since the editing was done at a hectic pace, the budget must have been restricted in some way. The road sign nonetheless acts as a detour and indicates that what you would expect after reading the first part of the sentence does not prove to be true. There must be a shift in direction for the second blank. Instead of the negative reaction you would expect from the first part of the sentence, a positive word must describe the critics’ responses. The critics must have liked the film even though the budget and editing were done under severe constraints.
A prephrase for this answer would be, “Filmed on a low budget and edited quickly, the film nonetheless was received well by the critics.”
Starting with the first blank because it is more precise, we are immediately drawn to choices (1) and (5). Although in choice (1) low works perfectly for the first blank, disappointed in the second blank is contrary to the sense of the sentence. Choice (5) looks good for both blanks. We’ll hold onto it and check the others. Choices (2) and (4) can be eliminated because the second word in each is negative. The second word in choice (3), amused, looks good, but the first word doesn’t make sense in describing the budget. How could a budget be ludicrously uneven?
Filmed on a ludicrously inadequate budget and edited at breakneck speed, Melotti’s documentary nonetheless surprised the Cannes critics with its trenchancy and verve.
3. Choice (2)
For the first blank, we are looking for a word that describes a desert and explains why the mummies are still intact. After the comma, we find an important road sign that acts as a detour. The word whereas indicates that the Egyptian conditions are different from those described after the road sign, which is where we learn about the conditions found in tropical rain forests. So, the road sign whereas indicates that the first blank will be the opposite of humid. Likewise, the second blank tells us about Aztec mummies, which we know will be the opposite of what is true of Egyptian mummies. If the Egyptian mummies are still intact, then Aztec mummies must not have survived.
A good prephrase of this sentence is, “The dryness of the desert explains why Egyptian mummies are still around, whereas the humidity in tropical rain forests explains why so few Aztec mummies have survived.”
Both of our predictions are pretty precise, so we can start with either one. Looking for a word that means “dryness” for the first blank directs us to choices (2) and (3). Both aridity and anhydration mean “lacking in moisture,” but the second word in choice (3), decay, is the opposite of what we’re looking for. We need a word that means “survived.” Choice (2), endured, is perfect. We’ll hold onto (2) and check the others. The first word in choices (1), (4), and (5) eliminates these answers. All of these words may be true of the desert, but none of them mean “dry.”
The aridity of the desert explains why so many Egyptian mummies are still intact, whereas the humidity of the tombs in tropical rain forests supports the agents of decay so that few Aztec mummies have endured.
4. Choice (3)
The meaning of this sentence itself is the best clue here for the missing words. We learn that they did something until only one option remained open to them, a desperate, last-minute solution. They must have waited or put off their work until they had no recourse.
A prephrase for this sentence could be, “They delayed until there was no choice but a last-minute solution to solve the problem.”
Starting with the first blank because our prediction is pretty definite, choices (2) and (3) look good. We can eliminate (2) because the second word, envision, that is, “predict or foresee,” does not convey the meaning of a solution. The second word in choice (3), implement, means “execute or achieve,” so choice (3) works well for both blanks. We’ll hold onto it and check the others. Based on the first word, choices (1), (4), and (5) can be eliminated. Of these three only (5), filibustered, suggests delaying, but even it has a more specific meaning that is not applicable here. To filibuster is to interrupt or delay something from occurring by engaging in activities such as long speeches and discourse.
They procrastinated until there was no recourse but to implement a desperate, last-minute solution to the problem.
5. Choice (4)
This is a fairly long sentence whose omissions occur toward the end. Take the sentence apart, paraphrasing what each phrase means, and pay close attention to the first few lines, which will have to tell us how to fill in the blanks. The road sign but because after the first comma is critical in directing us to the right answer. But indicates that a detour is coming, and the word because tells us that an explanation will be given. The second part of the sentence will contrast with the first and will tell us why it is so. In the first part, we learn that the engine was a marvel that reduced pollution. However, it was not fuel-efficient. The word because tells us that the lack of fuel efficiency led to something, unlike the fact that the engine was so marvelous. The fact that it reduced pollution must not have been important anymore, since there was a panic over fuel shortages.
A prephrase for this sentence would be, “The engine was rejected or modified in the 1970s, when concern with pollution gave way to panic over fuel shortages.”
Working with the first blank, choices (3), (4), and (5) look good. While modified in the first blank of choice (3) makes sense, the second phrase, opinion on, is too broad. We’re not told if it was a positive or negative opinion that gave way or what direction it gave way to. This answer, then, is not precise enough and would not warrant modifying the engine. In choice (4), if a preoccupation with pollution gave way to panic over fuel shortages, that would explain why the engine was no longer valued. This is a much stronger word choice than opinion on. This looks like the best answer, but we’ll check the others to be sure. The second word in choice (5) does not fit well in the context. A mere loss of interest in pollution would not explain abandoning a marvelous engine. We can eliminate choices (1) and (2) based on the first word in each, since neither of them suggests that the engine was rejected or changed in anyway.
The Wankel Rotary Engine was an engineering marvel that substantially reduced automobile exhaust emissions, but because it was less fuel-efficient than the standard piston-cylinder engine, it was abandoned in the early 1970s when preoccupation with pollution gave way to panic over fuel shortages.
6. Choice (3)
The semicolon between these two sentences acts as a “straight-ahead” road sign. It tells us that the second thought will be a continuation of, or will support, the first thought. The basic meaning of the first sentence is that friendship has its limits no matter what. The first blank must be filled in with something that reinforces the notion of having limits in all cases. The second sentence tells us that advice that is thrust upon someone cannot be considered an act of friendship. The second blank will be filled in with a word that describes advice that is thrust insistently on someone—advice that is not asked for.
A prephrase for this sentence would be, “All friendship, no matter how close, has boundaries; unwanted advice, when thrust upon someone, is rarely a sign of friendship.”
Choice (3) looks good right away because the first word, intimate, matches our prediction of close, and the second word, unsolicited, is perfect, too. We should check the other answers quickly just to be sure, though. Choices (1) and (4) can be eliminated because the first word in each is the opposite of close. The first word in choices (2) and (5) might be all right if nothing else were better, but both can be eliminated on the basis of the second word in each. Obverse means “inside out or upside down,” which doesn’t make sense in this context, and desired is the opposite of what we are looking for.
Friendship, no matter how intimate, has its boundaries; unsolicited advice, when thrust insistently upon one, is rarely an act of friendship, regardless of the adviser’s intent.
7. Choice (3)
For the first blank, we are looking for a word that will describe rivals. To determine what is in the second blank, we must read for the context of both clauses. Since the two clauses are joined by a semicolon that acts as a “straight-ahead” road sign, we know that the two ideas will support each other or continue a similar thought. In the first clause, we are given anarchists’ view of government, which their rivals agree with. The second clause tells us where the two rival groups differ.
This would be a hard one to prephrase, so we should go directly to the choices looking for words that are in line with the context of the sentences.
Since the first blank describes rivals, we can eliminate choice (1) because rivals are unlikely to be sympathetic. The second word in choice (2) rules out this answer because it is inconsistent with the sentence. Semantics means “the meaning of words.” They could not agree on the definition if they disagreed about the meaning of the words in the definition. Choice (3) is the best answer so far. Both words make sense in the sentence because ideological rivals would be ones that disagree on the philosophy of whatever they are in disagreement about. It would make sense, then, that they would differ in opinion about something important, like the implications of the definitions. We’ll hold onto this one and check the last two. In (4), the second word, expression, means “the way something is stated.” We know that the rivals agree on the definition, yet this answer would suggest that they disagree about how it is stated. How it’s stated and its definition are too closely related for them to agree on one and disagree about the other. Choice (5) is out because etiology is the study of causes, and it doesn’t make sense that they would disagree about the causes of the definition.
Anarchists contend that government is by definition the repression of natural human desire, and their ideological rivals concur; it is over the implications of this definition that the two groups battle.
8. Choice (5)
The word despite is a “detour” road sign that tells us that there is a change or a contrast later in the sentence. Despite something from the critics, the poet’s work sold steadily. The critics must not have favored the poetry, which would explain why it would be surprising that the work still sold well. For the first blank, we would look for a word that suggests the critics’ disapproval. The second blank is harder to figure out. We know the word will describe the critics, but many words, both positive and negative, could work here. We will just have to evaluate the meaning of each of the choices to which we narrow it down.
A good prephrase, for the first blank at least, would be, “Despite negative responses from some type of critics, the poetry sold well.”
Starting with the first blank, since it is more precise, choice (5) seems to be just right. Vitriol means severe criticism, which would work in the first blank, and influ-ential in the second blank explains why it’s surprising that these type of critics’ responses did not negatively impact the sales of the book. Still, we should run through the other answers quickly. From the first word, we can eliminate choice (1) because zeal is positive, and we need a negative word. Choice (3) does not fit well in the first blank either, because tedium may be de-fined as boredom. Receiving boring responses from the critics does not entail that the responses were negative. Choices (2) and (4) can be eliminated because of the second word in each. It is not logical that the response of obscure or ineffectual critics would explain the contrast suggested by the word despite. If the critics have no influence, it would not be surprising that the books sold well. We’re looking for a word that would justify the road sign despite.
Despite generous helpings of vitriol from a group of influential critics, this iconoclastic poet’s three volumes have sold steadily.
9. Choice (1)
The comma after the first blank is an important clue that tells us what type of word we are looking for. Because it is set off with commas, the phrase from production to projection simply renames the word in the preceding blank. This phrase describes every aspect of the film industry, so the correct word will, too. Since all of these components were held by one company, it makes sense that a monopoly would eventually arise. In the second blank, we’re looking for something that expresses the fact that monopolies were bound to arise.
A good prephrase of this answer would be, “Because the different components were arranged so that all aspects of the business were held by one company, monopolistic practices were bound to arise.”
Predictions for both of these blanks are pretty definite, but the second is a little more precise, so we’ll start there. Choice (1) looks good right away because inevitable means that it was bound to happen, which was our prediction for the second blank. Opportunities for control works well in the first blank, too. This one looks good. We’ll hold onto it and check the others. Choices (3) and (5) can be eliminated because the second word in each does not convey the meaning that something would have to happen. Choices (2) and (4) can be eliminated because the words for the first blank, burdens of business and means of solicitation, are not logical in the overall context. Having control of all of the components of the film industry would certainly not be burdens, nor would all of them act as a means of soliciting.
Because the different components of the film industry were “vertically” oriented—arranged so that all opportunities for control, from production to projection, were held by one company—it was inevitable that monopolistic practices would arise.
10. Choice (4)
The first blank will describe something that the peasants tried to conceal as they knelt before the body of the dictator’s son. This doesn’t sound like a very positive situation. They are kneeling and we know that they live under a dictatorship, so it is likely that the peasants are being required to do this. The second part of the sentence supports this theory. We learn that far from affection, something else brought them to the wake. Consequently, we’re looking for a negative word in both blanks.
Many words would work in these blanks, so we’ll just have to evaluate each choice carefully looking for two negative words that fit in this context.
Starting with the second blank since we have a little more information to work with there, choice (4) looks like the best answer. It makes sense that fear would bring them to the wake of the dictator’s son. The first word, trepidation, also fits the sentence, since it means “apprehension.” We’ll hold onto this one and check the others. Choice (1) can be eliminated because there is no indication in the sentence that the peasants are concealing sarcasm, and they would not show this if they felt something as extreme as hatred. Likewise, the second word in choice (2), violence, is not suggested from the clues. Choices (3), adulation, and (5), patriotism, are positive. We’re looking for something negative here.
From the trepidation that the peasants tried to conceal as they knelt before the body of the dictator’s son, I concluded that, far from affection, it was fear that had brought them to the wake.
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: Each sentence has one or more blank spaces. Each blank indicates that a word or phrase has been omitted. Of the five following words or sets of words, choose the one word or set that, when inserted in the sentence, best fits the meaning of the entire sentence.
1. Despite the increased attention______juvenile delinquency, a______in crimes committed by juveniles has been seen.
1 allotted to . . . dip
2 offered to . . . proliferation
3 given to . . . rise
4 spent on . . . decrease
5 withdrawn from . . . growth
2. Much of the Beatles’ music, as evidenced by “All You Need Is Love,” was characterized by a superficial_____subtly contradicted by an inherent, deeper cynicism.
1 competence
2 world-weariness
3 liveliness
4 naiveté
5 gloss
3. During their famous clash, Jung regarded Freud ambivalently, attacking the father of modern psychoanalysis even as he_____him.
1 enlightened
2 chastened
3 revered
4 despised
5 preferred
4. Hers was not a quick but a thorough intelligence; however______, she came to_____all things touching her life.
1 unmindfully . . . embrace
2 desperately . . . appreciate
3 slowly . . . jettison
4 methodically . . . discern
5 ploddingly . . . understand
5. Considering the____era in which the novel was written, its tone and theme are remarkably______.
1 enlightened . . . disenchanted
2 scholarly . . . undramatic
3 superstitious . . . medieval
4 permissive . . . puritanical
5 undistinguished . . . commonplace
6. The Colonel believed that even a minor______ the rules could not go_____if he were to maintain discipline.
1 disrespect for . . . unfelt
2 infraction of . . . unpunished
3 alteration of . . . unrewarded
4 deviation from . . . unappreciated
5 adherence to . . . unobserved
7. Feuds tend to arise in societies that_____centralized government; when public justice is difficult to enforce, private recourse is more_____.
1 espouse . . . acceptable
2 affirm . . . objectionable
3 dislike . . . satisfying
4 reject . . . brutal
5 lack . . . effective
8. He must always be the center of attention; he would rather be criticized than_____.
1 ignored
2 selfish
3 remembered
4 praised
5 different
9. Part of a person’s immediate response to pain is determined not only by his______emotional state but also by his______ previous painful experiences.
1 frightened . . . fears from
2 permanent . . . scars from
3 particular . . . lack of
4 current . . . memories of
5 recent . . . denial of
10. Greek philosophers tried to______contemporary notions of change and stability by postulating the existence of the atom,______particle from which all varieties of matter are formed.
1 personify . . . a mutating
2 reconcile . . . an indivisible
3 simplify . . . a specific
4 eliminate . . . an infinitesimal
5 confirm . . . an interesting
1. Choice (3)
The “detour” road sign despite at the beginning of this sentence helps us figure this one out. Because despite indicates that the two parts of the sentence are contrasting with each other, we know that despite the increased attention on this issue, something has happened. You would expect that with increased attention, there would be fewer crimes committed by this group. However, the word despite indicates that what we might expect does not prove to be true. We’re looking for the opposite of what we would normally expect given these circumstances.
A good prephrase for this one would be, “Despite increased attention on juvenile delinquency, an increase in crimes has been seen.”
Working with the second blank since it is more specific, choices (2), (3), and (5) look good. After considering the first blank, though, only choice (3) makes sense. The first word in choice (2), offered, is not strong enough. Simply offering attention to this issue does not tell us whether or not attention was actually given. We need something more definitive in the first blank to indicate that the expected cause and effect was not realized. Choice (5) can be eliminated since the first word, withdrawn, is the opposite of what we’re looking for. We’ll hold onto (3) and check the remaining two. Choices (1) and (4) are inappropriate, since the second word in each doesn’t have a contrasting meaning to the first clause. We must have a contrast because of the word despite in the first clause.
Despite the increased attention given to juvenile delinquency, a rise in crimes committed by juveniles has been seen.
2. Choice (4)
The “detour” road sign contradicted tells us that the blank will be opposite in meaning to cynicism—something like innocence.
A good paraphrase would be, “The Beatles’ music was characterized by a superficial innocence subtly contradicted by an inherent, deeper cynicism.”
Choice (4) looks good right away because naiveté means “innocence.” None of the other choices comes close to being opposite in meaning to cynicism.
Much of the Beatles’ music, as evidenced by “All You Need Is Love,” was characterized by a superficial naiveté subtly contradicted by an inherent, deeper cynicism.
3. Choice (3)
The key word to figuring out which answer should go in the blank is ambivalently. An ambivalent attitude is one that contains both positive and negative feelings. We know that the negative side of Jung’s attitude is that he attacked Freud. However, even as he attacked Freud, Jung did something that must have been positive in order to have shown ambivalence toward Freud. We’re looking for something positive for this blank.
Many positive words would work here, so it would be hard to prephrase an answer. Instead, we should go directly to the choices and evaluate each one carefully given the context of the sentence.
Choice (3) looks good right away since revered is a very positive word. We’ll hold onto it and check the others. Choices (2) and (4) can be eliminated because they are negative. Choice (1) is out because it doesn’t really make sense in the context of the sentence. If Jung enlightened Freud, it might have a positive effect on Freud, but it is impossible to say whether this would have a positive or negative impact on Jung. Choice (5) is not a good answer because it sounds idiomatically incorrect to say even as he preferred him.
During their famous clash, Jung regarded Freud ambivalently, attacking the father of modern psychoanalysis even as he revered him.
4. Choice (5)
The road sign but in the first clause indicates that her intelligence has two contrasting qualities: It is not quick, yet it is thorough. Since the two clauses are joined by a semicolon, a “straight-ahead” road sign, we know that the second will support or elaborate upon the first. There is more information available on the second blank; if we look there, we see that of the two qualities, the latter one, her thoroughness, is what is being described. The first blank must reflect the other quality, slowness.
The first blank can be prephrased, but the second is not as precise. A working paraphrase could be, “Her intelligence was not quick, but it was thorough; however slowly, she would come to understand all things eventually.”
Since the prediction for the first blank is more precise, we should start there. Choices (3) and (5) look good because the first word in each matches our prediction. Looking at the second blank, choice (3) can be eliminated. It would not make sense that she would jettison, or get rid of, all things in her life. Choice (5) looks good for both blanks. We’ll hold onto it and check the others. We can eliminate choices (1) and (2), because the first word in each does not relate to how slowly she thinks. Similarly, we can eliminate choice (4), because methodically does not tell us how slowly the thinking is done, just the manner in which it is done.
Hers was not a quick but a thorough intelligence; however ploddingly, she would come to understand all things touching her life.
5. Choice (4)
The most helpful approach to figuring out what should go in each of these blanks is to pay attention to the overall context. Two words are especially important here—considering at the beginning of the sentence and remarkably before the second blank. Thinking about how these words are typically used, we can determine that the two words will be opposites of each other. “Considering that the era is a certain way, it’s remarkable or surprising that the theme and tone are something different.” So, we know we’re looking for opposites.
Many different options are available for these blanks, so it would be hard to prephrase an answer here. We just have to be sure that the answer we select contains two opposite or contrasting words.
Scanning the choices, the two words in (4) appear to have the contrasting, opposing connotation we’re looking for. (Puritanical means “prudish and straight-laced.”) We’ll hold onto it and check the others. Choices (1) and (2) can be eliminated because there is no definite connection between the two. There is no specific relationship, opposite or otherwise, between enlightened and disenchanted, nor between scholarly and undramatic.Choices (3) and (5) can be eliminated because in each the words are closely related, not opposites of each other. During medieval times, superstitious beliefs were commonplace, and undistinguished and commonplace mean virtually the same thing.
Considering the permissive era in which the novel was written, its tone and theme are remarkably puritanical.
6. Choice (2)
After the second blank, we read that the Colonel wants to maintain discipline. From that context, we can determine that breaking the rules will not be tolerated.
A good prephrase here would be, “Even a minor breaking of the rules could not go unpunished.”
Looking for words that match what we predicted, choice (2) immediately jumps out. We should look at the others, though, just to be sure. Choices (3) and (4) are illogical, because an alteration in the rules would not be unrewarded by a strict disciplinarian, nor would a deviation from the rules be unappreciated. Choice (1) can be eliminated because a disrespect for rules would definitely be felt, not unfelt, by a disciplinarian. Choice (5) does not make sense, either, because there is no reason that adherence must be observed in order to maintain discipline.
The Colonel believed that even a minor infraction of the rules could not go unpunished if he were to maintain discipline.
7. Choice (5)
The semicolon between these clauses is a “straight-ahead” road sign that indicates a close connection between the two. The first clause tells us that feuds tend to arise in societies that feel a certain way about centralized government. In the second clause, we learn more about these societies—public justice is difficult to enforce in them. These societies must not have strong, centralized governments. This helps us with the first blank. The private recourse mentioned at the end of the second clause is referring to feuds, since a feud is a fight or dispute between factions or families that tends to be a private matter. So, feuds, or private recourse, tend to occur in these societies.
A prephrase of this answer might be, “Feuds tend to arise in societies that do not have centralized governments; when public justice is unavailable, private recourse is more common.”
Choice (5) looks like a good answer right away because lack is very close to our prediction, and effective would make sense in this context, too. We’ll check the others just to be sure. Choices (1) and (2) can be eliminated, because the first word in each would mean that these societies are in favor of centralized government. We’re looking for the opposite of this. Choice (3) can be eliminated since a dislike of centralized government would not in itself make public justice difficult to enforce. We need a stronger word in the first blank that would explain why public justice is not an option for these societies. Moreover, we don’t know whether or not private recourse is more satisfying when public justice is hard to enforce. Choice (4) can be eliminated because even though the first word, reject, is a good selection, the second word, brutal, is unsupported in the sentence. We do not know that the recourse is “more brutal” in these societies than in others. We only know that the recourse tends to be private rather than public.
Feuds tend to arise in societies that lack centralized governments; when public justice is difficult to enforce, private recourse is more effective.
8. Choice (1)
The semicolon between these clauses acts as a “straight-ahead” road sign that tells us that these two ideas are closely related or elaborate upon each other. Since the blank is in the second clause, we’ll look to the first for direction. There we discover that this person requires lots of attention. The second clause will be consistent with this notion; it explains just how much he needs this attention. What would he rather be criticized for than have happen? Not getting any attention.
A prephrase here could be, “He’d rather be criticized than ignored.”
Choice (1) meets our prediction, but we’ll look at the others just to be sure. Scanning the other choices quickly now that we have one that looks perfect, we see that all of the remaining options do not support the first part of the sentence. None of these other choices reinforce the idea that he always has to be the center of attention.
He must always be the center of attention; he would rather be criticized than ignored.
9. Choice (4)
The road sign that helps us in this sentence is the words not only . . . but also, which indicate that more than one thing determines response to pain. The word in the first blank will describe an emotional state, and the second will relate to actual, previous experiences. One is based on feelings, and the other on actual events. The road sign tells us that the two words will contrast with each other in some way.
It would be difficult to predict the many different pairs that could fill these blanks. We will just have to evaluate the choices carefully, looking for words that contrast with each other.
Choices (1) and (2) can be eliminated because these words are too similar to warrant the not only . . . but also contrast. These pairs of words are basically saying the same thing. In choice (3) particular works well, but lack of previous experiences doesn’t make sense. Choice (4) makes sense in the context and has a contrasting meaning that supports the use of the not only . . . but also phrase, contrasting current emotions with memories of previous experiences. We’ll just check the next answer to be sure that choice (4) is the one we want to select. Choice (5) doesn’t work because the recent emotional state is not very logical and denial of previous experiences definitely doesn’t make sense. Why would the recent emotional state, and not the current one, have an influence? And denying a previous experience would also mean that it would not have an influence on the person responding to pain.
Part of a person’s immediate response to pain is determined not only by his current emotional state but also by his memories of previous painful experiences.
10. Choice (2)
These philosophers were trying to do something with the notions of change and stability. The first thing we should notice is that change and stability are starkly opposing ideas. Therefore, they must have been doing more than just trying to understand change and stability, which really wouldn’t be that difficult anyway. They must have been trying to rationalize something about both of them. The first blank, then, will be filled with a word that expresses what they were trying to resolve about change and stability. The way they tried to do this was to hypothesize about the existence of a particle that could explain both change and stability. We’re told that this particle is the atom from which all varieties of matter are formed, which would include both changing and stable things. The second blank will describe the atom in some way.
The first blank is easier to prephrase, such as “Greek philosophers tried to resolve notions of change and stability,” for the first part of the sentence, and we’ll just carefully evaluate the choices for the second blank.
Choice (2) is the only one in which the first word reflects the content of the sentence. Reconcile (which means “settle a dispute”) is the perfect description of trying to rationalize the simultaneous existence of opposing forces. The second word looks good, too. We’ll hold onto it, and check the others. Choices (1), (3), (4), and (5) can be eliminated on the basis of the first word in each. There is no suggestion in the sentence that any of these things is what the philosophers wanted to do.
Greek philosophers tried to reconcile contemporary notions of change and stability by postulating the existence of the atom, an indivisible particle from which all varieties of matter are formed.
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: Each sentence has one or more blank spaces. Each blank indicates that a word or phrase has been omitted. Of the five following words or sets of words, choose the one word or set that, when inserted in the sentence, best fits the meaning of the entire sentence.
1. To an untrained eye the horse appeared to be very ______, whereas in actuality it was ______and unmanageable.
1 beautiful . . . reckless
2 gentle . . . wild
3 calm . . . indolent
4 spirited . . . energetic
5 friendly . . . languid
2. The modern detective novel grew out of Gothic fiction when nineteenth-century authors began to propose ______rather than supernatural explanations for seemingly ______occurrences.
1 earthly . . . everyday
2 complex . . . scientific
3 rational . . . mysterious
4 religious . . . . miraculous
5 literary . . . mundane
3. Though scientific discoveries are often disproved shortly after they’ve been accepted as fact, scientists still seem to leap to hasty conclusions, ______that the ______nature of what can be called “fact” has not eroded their confidence.
1 proving . . . undeniable
2 demonstrating . . . illusory
3 showing . . . predictable
4 denying . . . distinctive
5 admitting . . . volatile
4. It was an ingrained concept of Soviet doctrine that another world war was ______and a great many Soviet domestic and foreign policies and practices were designed to ensure that if any nation ______the war, it would be the Soviet Union.
1 impossible . . . won
2 survivable . . . prevented
3 coming . . . commanded
4 avoidable . . . instigated
5 inevitable . . . survived
5. Many believe that jazz improvisation is a creation of the 20th century, but it is ______that improvisation has its ______in the figured-bass techniques of the 17th and 18th centuries.
1 unlikely . . . roots
2 possible . . . past
3 arguable . . . origin
4 proven . . . future
5 interesting . . . unity
6. Whales hurt none in their peaceful migrations through the earth’s seas, yet are savagely hunted by man, who ______superior need.
1 assumes
2 perpetuates
3 retains
4 assimilates
5 manifests
7. The meaning of this line seems clear: The poet, though not denigrating the concept of ______, nonetheless emphasizes the importance of man’s role in humanity in the ______.
1 independence . . . abstract
2 community . . . extreme
3 unity . . . synthesis
4 perfection . . . majority
5 individuality . . . aggregate
8. His unbridled curiosity led him to explore every field of ______, yet his ______stances kept him at odds with the devout society he so wanted to be acknowledged by.
1 science . . . interesting
2 interest . . . common
3 thought . . . unorthodox
4 hope . . . heretical
5 study . . . optimistic
9. Because of his inherent ______, Harry steered clear of any job that he suspected could turn out to be a travail.
1 impudence
2 insolence
3 eminence
4 indolence
5 imminence
10. Victorien Sardou’s play La Tosca was originally written as a ______for Sarah Bernhardt, and later ______into the famous Puccini opera.
1 role . . . reincarnated
2 biography . . . changed
3 metaphor . . . edited
4 present . . . fictionalized
5 vehicle . . . adapted
1. Choice (2)
The road sign whereas in actuality indicates a contrast—however the horse appeared, it was really the opposite. From the end of the sentence we know that the horse was unmanageable, so the first blank will contain a descriptive word that contrasts with unmanageable. The second blank will be filled with a descriptive word reinforcing a negative quality like unmanageable.
A good prephrase for this would be, “Although the horse appeared calm or manageable, it proved to be something negative.”
Since our prediction is more precise for the first word, we’ll start there. Choices (2) and (3) will both work well for the first blank. The second word in choice (2) is consistent with the context. It is logical to say that the horse is both wild and unmanageable. Choice (3), however, does not make sense in the second blank, because indolent means “lazy.” There is no indication that the horse is lazy, and the two words, indolent and unmanageable, are not similar enough to be joined by the road sign and. We’ll throw out (3) and hold onto (2) while we quickly check the rest. Choice (1) can be ruled out because a beautiful horse could be either manageable or not manageable. Beautiful would not justify the word although at the beginning of the sentence. Choice (4) can be eliminated because we are looking for contrasting words in these blanks, and spirited and energetic are very similar in meaning. Choice (5) doesn’t work because languid means “weak” or “sluggish.” A weak or sluggish horse would most likely be manageable, not unmanageable, and there is no contrasting meaning at all between friendly and languid.
To an untrained eye the horse appeared to be very gentle, whereas in actuality it was wild and unmanageable.
2. Choice (3)
The context of this sentence is what leads us to the right answer here. We can figure out what type of word should go in the first blank because of the phrase rather than supernatural explanations. That tells us that the word for the first blank means “not supernatural.” As for the second blank, we know that previously supernatural causes were blamed for this type of occurrence, so it must be a type of occurrence that does not seem normal.
A good prephrase of this answer would be, “Authors began to propose natural rather than supernatural explanations for seemingly abnormal occurrences.”
Choice (3) seems just right. Both words fit our prediction, so we’ll hold onto it and check the others. In choice (1), the first word, earthly, looks good, but the second word, everyday, doesn’t fit. We need a word for the second blank that means abnormal. Everyday would be the opposite of what we need. Choices (2), (4), and (5) can be eliminated because the first word in each is too different from what we’re looking for. None of these qualities—complex, religious, or literary—is suggested in the sentence.
The modern detective novel grew out of Gothic fiction when nineteenth-century authors began to propose rational rather than supernatural explanations for seemingly mysterious occurrences.
3. Choice (2)
Paraphrasing long sentences will help you to cut to their essentials. Here we learn that even though discoveries are disproved quickly, scientists still jump to conclusions. What does that indicate about the scientists? It must not bother them that what is supposed to be “fact” is indeed likely to change. After all, they continue leaping to hasty conclusions even though it is common that their discoveries are disproved.
This would be a difficult one to prephrase. Many words could go in each blank, so we must evaluate the choices carefully and be sure that both words work in the context of the sentence.
Choice (1) can be eliminated because the second word, undeniable, is inconsistent with the notion that the facts are changing, and that what we know about them now may not be accepted later. Choice (2) looks good for both blanks, so we’ll hold on to it for now. Choice (3) is out because predictable is the opposite of what this sentence is saying about scientific knowledge. It’s not predictable; it’s constantly changing. Choice (4) is illogical in the context. The scientists are still following the same pattern of jumping to conclusions. This answer suggests that their confidence has been eroded, which is proven to not be the case in the rest of the sentence. Choice (5) is incorrect because it’s not logical to say that the scientists are admitting that they are wrong to jump to conclusions. Why would they still do it, if they admit it’s wrong? Even if you thought this might work, another choice, (2), fits much better.
Though scientific discoveries are often disproved shortly after they’ve been accepted as fact, scientists still seem to leap to hasty conclusions, demonstrating that the illusory nature of what can be called “fact” has not eroded their confidence.
4. Choice (5)
The second part of this sentence helps us fill in the first blank about what was an ingrained concept of Soviet doctrine. Just before the second blank, we hear definitive things about the war. We’re told that the Soviets believed that if any nation did something during or before or after the war, they wanted it to be the Soviet Union. Since they wanted this thing for their own country, no doubt it was positive. They must have anticipated that there would be another world war, and it makes sense that if they anticipated another war, they would want to be the ones to come out on top. This helps us fill in the second blank.
A prephrase of this answer would be, “The Soviets believed that another war was unavoidable, so they wanted to ensure they did not lose it.”
Choice (5) is the only one in which both words seem to be in line with what we’ve predicted. We’ll hold onto it, and check the others. Starting with our prediction for the first blank, which is more precise, we can eliminate choices (1) and (4). These choices express the opposite meaning of what we’re looking for. Choices (2) and (3) do not make sense when paired together. Just because a war is survivable doesn’t mean they would necessarily want to prevent it. Likewise, just because a war was coming, there would be no reason for them to think they could command it. And how would one country command the entire war anyway? They could command their side of the war, but nothing else.
It was an ingrained concept of Soviet doctrine that another world war was inevitable, and a great many Soviet domestic and foreign policies and practices were designed to ensure that if any nation survived the war, it would be the Soviet Union.
5. Choice (3)
The road sign but after the comma indicates that a detour is coming. So, there will be a change or contrast from the first part of the sentence. At the beginning of the sentence, we’re told that many think jazz improvisation first occurred in the 20th century. The second part of this sentence where we find the two blanks will no doubt dispute this belief.
A good prephrase of this answer would be “but it is believed that improvisation has its beginnings in the 17th and 18th centuries.”
Beginning with the choices for the second blank, choices (1) and (3) are our closest matches. Choice (1) can be eliminated because the first word, unlikely, is the opposite of what we’re looking for. Choice (3) seems to fill both blanks well. We’ll hold onto it, and check the others. Choice (2) is out because it is idiomatically incorrect to say that improvisation had its past in the 17th or 18th centuries. Choice (4) doesn’t work because the second word, future, is illogical. The future cannot be in the past. Choice (5) also doesn’t make sense because the second word, unity, is unsupported in the sentence. We’re not looking for information on the characteristics of jazz; instead, we need something that indicates when jazz improvisation originated.
Many believe that jazz improvisation is a creation of the 20th century, but it is arguable that improvisation has its origin in the figured-bass techniques of the 17th and 18th centuries.
6. Choice (1)
From this sentence we know that the whales are peaceful, yet are savagely hunted. From this tone, we can assume that the author disapproves of the situation. The blank, then, will be filled with something that suggests man’s superior need is not a real one.
A prephrase for this sentence might be, “The whales are savagely hunted by man, who argues for superior need, or believes he has superior need.”
Choice (1) looks good because assumes matches the tone and content of this sentence. We’ll hold onto it, and check the others. Choice (2) does not work because there is nothing in the sentence that tells us how long this has been going on. And it sounds like a justification for hunting, which the author would oppose. Choices (3) and (5) can be ruled out because they are not consistent with the author’s tone. The author thinks it is bad that the whales are hunted. The author would not agree that man retains or manifests superior need. Both of these answers imply that man has a right to hunt the whales. Choice (4), assimilates, is not logical in this context. What would the phrase man assimilates superior need mean?
Whales hurt none in their peaceful migrations through the earth’s seas, yet they are savagely hunted by man, who assumes superior need.
7. Choice (5)
The key to finding an answer here is the road sign nonetheless, which signals contrasting ideas in the two clauses. Because it is in the first part of the sentence, the word for the first blank will contrast with the phrase the importance of man’s role in humanity, found after the road sign nonetheless.
It would be very difficult to prephrase an answer to this sentence, so we just have to keep in mind that the two words will be contrasting and that the first one will relate to “man’s role in humanity.”
Choices (1), (2), and (4) can be eliminated because there is no contrast between the two words in each. None of the words in these pairs really has any specific relationship to each other when it comes to meaning. Choice (3) can be eliminated; these words reflect a similar meaning rather than a contrasting one. Since aggregate in choice (5) means “the whole,” there is a clear contrast with the first word, individuality. Here’s our answer.
The meaning of this line seems clear: The poet, though not denigrating the concept of individuality, nonetheless emphasizes the importance of man’s role in humanity in the aggregate.
8. Choice (3)
The “detour” road sign yet between these clauses tells us that there will be a change in direction in this sentence. We are told that his unbridled curiosity resulted in his exploration of every field, which is a positive thing. The change in direction comes when, after the word yet, we find out something negative. He wanted to be acknowledged by society, a society we are told was devout. The second blank, describing his stances, must be filled with a word that would not be acceptable to a devout society. Since devout means “devoted to religion,” the word will have to mean “antireligious.” For the first blank, any word that conveyed the idea that he explored many different subjects would work.
We can make a pretty definite prephrase for the second blank in this sentence, but the first blank could be filled with various words. A partial prephrase would be, “Yet his sacrilegious stances kept him at odds with a devout society.”
Checking the second word, we are immediately drawn to choices (3) and (4), both of which have the meaning of “against accepted religious beliefs.” Choice (3) looks good for both blanks because every field of thought conveys the idea of a wide array of subjects. Choice (4) doesn’t work for the second blank because field of hope doesn’t relate to the breadth of his explorations but more to expectations; besides, it’s not really clear what the phrase every field of hope is meant to signify. Choice (3) seems correct, but let’s review the others. There is no reason in choice (1) that his interesting stances would be objectionable to a devout society, and field of science is too limited. He may have explored much more than just science. In choices (2) and (5), interest and study work for the first blank, but common and optimistic don’t make sense for the second. A devout society would not necessarily reject a common or optimistic stance.
His unbridled curiosity led him to explore every field of thought, yet his unorthodox stances kept him at odds with the devout society he so wanted to be acknowledged by.
9. Choice (4)
The blank in this sentence is going to be filled with a word that describes Harry’s personality. We discover what his personality is like when we read that he doesn’t want a job that will be a travail. Since travail means hard work, something that is extremely difficult, then we know that the missing word will reflect that disposition. Harry doesn’t like to work hard.
A good prephrase here would be, “Due to his laziness, Harry avoided jobs that might be a travail.”
Choice (4), indolence, is perfect because it means “laziness,” but we’ll look at the others to double-check this answer. Choices (1) and (2), impudence and insolence, are incorrect because they both describe someone who is disrespectful and cocky. We don’t know that Harry is either one of these. He just doesn’t like to work. Choice (3), eminence, means “high rank” or “high repute,” neither of which work here. It doesn’t make sense that Harry’s eminence would make him want to avoid work. Choice (5), imminence, can be eliminated because it refers to something that is about to happen. There is no logical connection between imminence and travail.
Because of his inherent indolence, Harry steered clear of any job that he suspected could turn out to be a travail.
10. Choice (5)
To correctly complete this sentence, we must note that La Tosca was first written as a play and then made into an opera. This helps us to determine what type of word should go in the second blank. The second blank will explain that the play was changed or adapted to become an opera. The first blank is harder to work with. The play was written for the actress Sarah Bernhardt to do something, but it’s unclear exactly what that might be, so we’ll have to look to the choices for the second word.
A prephrase of this one would be easy for the second blank but harder for the first. We should look for a sentence like, “The play was written as something for Sarah Bernhardt, and later changed or adapted into the famous opera.”
Choice (5) immediately looks good because of the word adapted in the second blank, which we had predicted. Even though the first word, vehicle, may seem odd at first, it makes sense after you realize that it’s not the idea of transportation that is meant here but vehicle in the sense of a play that was created as a means for displaying a specific actor’s talents. Both words will work, so we’ll hold onto this answer and check the other choices. Choice (1) can be eliminated because reincarnated suggests the rebirth of something living, and role is also inappropriate since an entire play would not be written as a role for one person. Choice (2) is acceptable for the second word, but the first, biography, doesn’t fit. Sardou could write a biography of Bernhardt, but not one for her. Choice (3) can be eliminated because metaphor would not work for the first blank, since a metaphor is a poetic device used to describe something; meanwhile, edited for the second blank does not accurately represent the changes necessary to make a play into an opera. Much more must be done to this play than simply editing. For choice (4), the first word, present, is fine, although the play might be an unusual gift, but the second word, fictionalized, is wrong. Changing a story from a play into an opera does not change it from being based on reality (nonfiction) to being fictionalized.
Victorien Sardou’s play La Tosca was originally written as a vehicle for Sarah Bernhardt, and later adapted into the famous Puccini opera.
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: Each sentence has one or more blank spaces. Each blank indicates that a word or phrase has been omitted. Of the five following words or sets of words, choose the one word or set that, when inserted in the sentence, best fits the meaning of the entire sentence.
1. First published in 1649, Pacheco’s ______treatise contains not only chapters outlining iconography and technique, but also commentary on contemporary painters that now ______our most comprehensive information on these artists, as well as the most thorough discussion available on Baroque aesthetics.
1 inconsequential . . . comprises
2 invaluable . . . constitutes
3 historical . . . lacks
4 superficial . . . supports
5 important . . . excludes
2. Very little is known of the writer Theophilus; however, from his eclectic writings, we can ______that he was well ______.
1 assume . . . educated
2 understand . . . disciplined
3 appreciate . . . respected
4 expect . . . exposed
5 acknowledge . . . received
3. Because he was highly regarded as a theoretical ______throughout his career, it is somewhat surprising that today he is remembered ______for a poem he wrote on painting.
1 artist . . . primarily
2 practitioner . . . exclusively
3 painter . . . possibly
4 writer . . . surreptitiously
5 mathematician . . . only
4. Her systematic approach to scientific research was often rewarded in her ______life, but it proved disastrous when her mind examined every flaw in her ______friends and family, preventing her from truly appreciating others.
1 career . . . disorganized
2 private . . . analytical
3 public . . . fragile
4 professional . . . methodical
5 family . . . orderly
5. Because law and custom require that a definite determination be made, a judge is forced to behave as if a verdict is ______, when in fact the evidence may not be ______.
1 negotiable . . . persuasive
2 justified . . . accessible
3 unassailable . . . insubstantial
4 incontrovertible . . . admissible
5 self-evident . . . conclusive
6. The author presumably believes that all businessmen are ______, for her main characters, whatever qualities they may lack, are virtual paragons of ______.
1 clever . . . ingenuity
2 covetous . . . greed
3 virtuous . . . deceit
4 successful . . . ambition
5 cautious . . . achievement
7. Personal correspondence is often a marvelous reflection of the spirit of an age; the subtle ______of Swift’s epistles mirrored the eighteenth-century delight in elegant ______.
1 profundity . . . ditties
2 poignancy . . . pejoratives
3 contempt . . . anachronisms
4 provinciality . . . pomposity
5 vitriol . . . disparagement
8. Ginnie expects her every submission to be published or selected for performance, and this time her ______is likely to be ______.
1 candor . . . dispelled
2 anticipation . . . piqued
3 enthusiasm . . . dampened
4 optimism . . . vindicated
5 awareness . . . clouded
9. His opponent found it extremely frustrating that the governor’s solid support from the voting public was not eroded by his ______of significant issues.
1 exaggeration
2 misapprehension
3 discussion
4 selection
5 acknowledgment
10. Our spokesperson seems to be uncertain of our eventual victory but ______facing the alternative, as if merely admitting the possibility of defeat would lead to the dreaded thing itself.
1 unsure of
2 complacent when
3 fearful of
4 certain of
5 helped by
1. Choice (2)
The first blank in this sentence will describe Pacheco’s treatise. Later in the sentence we find out that this treatise contains information on iconography, technique, and contemporary painters. Already this sounds like a broad and significant treatise. This is confirmed after the second blank, when we’re told that the treatise is our most comprehensive information on these subjects. The word in the first blank will definitely be a positive one.
It would be hard to prephrase this answer, but we know we’re looking for a positive word in the first blank, and the second has to describe how we use the information now.
Looking for a positive word in the first blank, we can narrow it down to choices (2), (5), and possibly (3). Choice (3) does not look very promising because historical is neither positive nor negative, and the second word, lacks, definitely rules this answer out. It’s not logical that a treatise filled with so much information would now lack our most comprehensive information on these topics. Choice (2) looks good for both blanks. Let’s see if we can rule out the others. Even though important is a good selection for the first blank in choice (5), the second word, excludes, does not make sense. An important treatise, filled with so much information, would not exclude our most comprehensive information. Choices (1) and (4) can be eliminated—the first word in both is negative. They both are contradicted by the text.
First published in 1649, Pacheco’s invaluable treatise contains not only chapters outlining iconography and technique, but also commentary on contemporary painters that now constitutes our most comprehensive information on these artists, as well as the most thorough discussion available on Baroque aesthetics.
2. Choice (1)
Two important road signs help us in this sentence—the semicolon between the clauses and the word however. The semicolon indicates that the two clauses will contain similar thoughts; the second sentence goes on to explain or elaborate upon the first. The word however indicates that even though the second clause will discuss the same topic as the first, something new or different has been brought in. In the first clause, we’re told that not much is known about this writer. The second clause tells us that even though we don’t know much about him, his writings are eclectic, which indicates something about him. Since the word eclectic means “drawn from various sources,” we can get a sense of what should go in the second blank. Some way or another, Theophilus was exposed to a lot of different information.
A prephrase for this one might be, “From his writings, we can presume him to be well traveled, well educated, or well versed.”
Choice (1) looks like a good match right away, although (4) seems to work as well. Both words in (1) are logical and sound correct in the sentence. In choice (4), expect is fine for the first blank, but exposed doesn’t work in the second. It is idiomatically incorrect to say that he was well exposed. We would say that he was exposed to many or various things, but not that he was well exposed. Since we can eliminate (4), (1) looks like our answer. We’ll check the others quickly just to be sure. Choices (2), (3), and (5) can be rejected because the second word in each is not consistent with the meaning of eclectic. It is from his eclectic writings that we can make an assumption about him. So, the second blank must be filled with a word that underscores the meaning of eclectic.
Very little is known of the writer Theophilus; however, from his eclectic writings, we can assume that he was well educated.
3. Choice (5)
The road sign because at the beginning of this sentence tells us that a reason is being given. The second part of the sentence tells us that it’s surprising that he’s known for a poem he wrote on painting, so he must not have been a writer, poet, or a painter. The first blank will describe a career that seems to be at odds with these art forms.
A prephrase for this sentence would be difficult to formulate. We’ll just evaluate the choices carefully, eliminating words that wouldn’t fit in this context.
Since we’re looking for someone who was regarded as something other than an artist or writer, we can eliminate choices (1), (3), and (4). Of the remaining two, the first word in choice (2), practitioner, is not precise enough. We don’t know what type of practitioner this might be, and we must have something in the first blank that clearly contrasts with the second. Choice (5) works well for both blanks.
Because he was highly regarded as a theoretical mathematician throughout his career, it is somewhat surprising that today he is remembered exclusively for a poem he wrote on painting.
4. Choice (4)
The first blank in this sentence describes the aspect of life that was rewarded by her systematic approach. From the context, it is likely that this aspect will be found in her work life as opposed to her home life, but we’ll confirm that with the other information in the sentence. The word but after the comma is a “detour” road sign, indicating that there will be a contrast between the two clauses. So, her approach is helpful in one aspect of her life, but is detrimental in her personal life. We were right. The first blank will describe her life at work. The second blank will be filled with a word that describes her mind. We already know from the beginning of the sentence that she has a systematic approach to her research. The second missing word must be a descriptive word that is consistent with this systematic approach.
A prephrase for this answer would be, “Her systematic approach was rewarded in her work life, but was disastrous when her analytical mind examined every flaw in her friends and family.”
Starting with the first blank, two choices fit perfectly, (1) and (4). Choice (3) might seem okay at first, but a public life does not necessarily mean “work.” Since we have other selections that are more precise, we don’t need one that is not a strong match. Of (1) and (4), choice (1) can be eliminated because the second word, disorganized, is contradictory to the sentence. We were told that she has a systematic approach, not a chaotic one. Choice (4) is perfect for both blanks. We’ll quickly check the remaining two to confirm this. Choices (2) and (5) can be eliminated because the first word in each is the opposite of what we’re looking for. The first blank describes her work life, not her “private” or “family” life.
Her systematic approach to scientific research was often rewarded in her professional life, but it proved disastrous when her methodical mind examined every flaw in her friends and family, preventing her from truly appreciating others.
5. Choice (5)
The long descriptive clause at the beginning of this sentence sets the stage for figuring out the first blank. We’re told that it’s required that a determination, or decision, be made. So, what do judges have to do? The last clause answers this for us. It says when in fact the evidence may not be something, which suggests that the evidence may not always be conclusive. So, judges must be forced to act like the verdict is a good one, yet the end of the sentence implies that the evidence may not be quite so convincing.
A prephrase of this answer might be, “A judge is forced to act as if a verdict is right, when in fact the evidence may not be compelling.”
Choice (5) immediately looks good, since both self-evident and conclusive match our predictions. We’ll hold onto it, and check the others. Choice (1) can be eliminated because the first word, negotiable, is contrary to the sentence. We’re told that the law requires that a definite determination be made—not a negotiable one. The second word in choices (2) and (4) does not work, since it’s not logical that the evidence may not be accessible or admissible. It would have had to be both accessible and admissible in order for a decision to be reached based upon it. Choice (3) is out because evidence that is not insubstantial would be substantial, which is contrary to the meaning of this sentence. We want a word that implies that the evidence was not good enough.
Because law and custom require that a definite determination be made, a judge is forced to behave as if a verdict is self-evident, when in fact the evidence may not be conclusive.
6. Choice (1)
The first blank will be filled with a word that describes a characteristic of businessmen. The second part of this sentence tells us what type of word we’re looking for in the first blank as well as the second. We’re told that whatever qualities they may lack, they are paragons, or excellent models, of something. Normally the word paragon is used in a positive light. So, we don’t know exactly what quality will fill these blanks, but most likely it will be positive. In any case, both words will reflect the same quality, so they will be similar in meaning.
It would be hard to predict the words for these blanks, so we’ll just evaluate each choice carefully, looking for a pair of words that are positive and have similar meanings.
Choice (2) can be eliminated because it is negative. Choices (3), (4), and (5) can be eliminated because the words in each are contradictory or have no real link between them. Virtuous and deceit are opposites of each other, and being successful and having great ambition might be related, but do not have to be. Similarly, it’s difficult to see how being cautious and having achievement(s) are necessarily linked.
The author presumably believes that all businessmen are clever, for her main characters, whatever qualities they may lack, are virtual paragons of ingenuity.
7. Choice (5)
The semicolon is a road sign that tells us that this is a “straight-ahead” sentence. The second half must agree with the first. If personal correspondence reflects the spirit of the age, then Swift’s epistles, or letters, must reflect the spirit of this. That is, whatever quality that is represented by the first blank must also agree with the quality represented in the second blank.
It would be hard to predict the words for these blanks, so we’ll evaluate each choice carefully, looking for a pair of words that have similar meanings.
Choice (5) works the best: vitriol is abuse, so this would mirror his society’s love of elegant disparagement. Choice (1) can be eliminated because there is no link between profundities and ditties (songs). Choices (2), (3), and (4) can also be eliminated because the words in each are not necessarily linked.
Personal correspondence is often a marvelous reflection of the spirit of an age; the subtle vitriol of Swift’s epistles mirrored the eighteenth-century delight in elegant disparagement.
8. Choice (4)
The road sign and directs us to the correct answer for this sentence. Both blanks occur in the second half of the sentence, so the first half will provide most of the information. We learn that Ginnie expects to be published every time she submits something. The words and this time are a “straight-ahead” road sign that indicates the second half will support this notion. This time, Ginnie will probably be right.
A good prephrase here would be, “This time, her expectation is likely to be realized.”
Choices (2), (3), and (4) all meet our prediction for the first blank, so we’ll check the second word to eliminate the wrong ones. Looking at the selections for the second blank, choice (4), vindicated, is the only one that allows for her expectations to be fulfilled this time. We’ll hold on to this answer, and check the others. Choice (2) does not work because piqued means aroused or excited. Since she always expects to be published, using the word piqued here would indicate that this time would be no different than all the other times. But the sentence indicates that this time her expectations will be fulfilled, which implies that this may not be true of all the times she submits. Choice (3) is out because dampened is the opposite of what we want. Likewise, choices (1) and (5) can be eliminated because the second word in each has a negative connotation. Each suggests that Ginnie will be disappointed. We want something that says her expectations will be fulfilled.
Ginnie expects her every submission to be published or selected for performance, and this time her optimism is likely to be vindicated.
9. Choice (2)
If the opponent was frustrated that the governor’s support was not eroded by something, that thing must be negative. You wouldn’t expect support to be eroded because of something positive about the candidate. We know from the phrase after the blank that this negative thing has something to do with significant issues. So, we’re looking for a word that would indicate something negative about the governor and significant issues.
There are many predictions that would work here, but some of the most obvious would be his “lack of interest in” or “lack of concern for” or “lack of knowledge of significant issues.”
We don’t have a strong prediction here, so we’ll have to evaluate each choice carefully. We need to also keep in mind that the word of follows the blank, so the correct choice will sound idiomatically correct with of. Choice (2) looks good right away, since misapprehension means “misunderstanding.” We’ll hold onto it and check the others. Choice (1) won’t work, because you wouldn’t expect the public to be unhappy about the exaggeration of issues that were important. They would be glad that those issues were getting attention. Choices (3), (4), and (5) are not negative in quality. There would be nothing wrong with the governor’s discussion, selection, or acknowledgment of significant issues. If the governor did any of these things, the opponent would have no reason to believe that the public should be negatively impacted by them.
His opponent found it extremely frustrating that the governor’s solid support from the voting public was not eroded by his misapprehension of significant issues.
10. Choice (3)
The road sign but before the blank indicates that a “detour” or shift in direction is coming. The spokesperson seems unsure of a victory, but feels something about facing the alternative. After the comma, we get an idea of what that something is. Apparently, the spokesperson doesn’t want to admit it, due to a superstition that just saying it would make it happen.
A good prephrase here would be, “The spokesperson is afraid to face the alternative, as if admitting the possibility would make it happen.”
Choice (3) is a perfect match. We’ll check the others just to be sure. For (1) to work, the road sign before the blank would have to be and, indicating that the two things are closely linked. The spokesperson is unsure of the victory and unsure of facing the alternative. Even that doesn’t make great sense, but unsure of will definitely not work with the “detour” road sign but before the blank. Choice (2) is acceptable, since complacent means “indifferent.” Choices (4) and (5) are contradicted in the sentence. If the spokesperson is uncertain of the victory, he couldn’t be certain of facing the future. And if the spokesperson is fearful of something, as we’re told at the end of the sentence, then it’s unlikely that he’d feel helped by it.
Our spokesperson seems to be uncertain of our eventual victory but is fearful of facing the alternative, as if merely admitting the possibility of defeat would lead to the dreaded thing itself.
The first step towards testing your best on GRE analogies is to get familiar with the format. Analogies test your vocabulary and your ability to figure out the relationships between pairs of words. You’re given a pair of capitalized words (for example, POTATO : VEGETABLE), and you’re asked to determine their relationship, then identify the answer choice that has the same relationship.
The directions for this question type look like this:
Directions: In this question, a related pair of words is followed by five lettered pairs of words. Choose the one pair that best expresses a relationship similar to that expressed in the original pair.
On the GRE, the more questions you get right, the more difficult the analogies you encounter will become. If you perform well on GRE Verbal, you can expect to see analogies towards the end of the test that feature quite difficult, esoteric vocabulary.
To improve your skill in answering GRE analogy questions, you’ll need to familiarize yourself with the basic principles for approaching them—and you’ll need some practice. The Four Fundamentals below will help you to increase your skills and confidence as you approach the day of the test. And with skills and confidence, you’ll be able to earn points on Test Day!
GRE Analogy Questions Consist of Two Words
The two words, called the stem pair, are followed by five answer choices, each consisting of two words that are also separated by colons. Analogy questions on the GRE CAT look like this:
1. LITER : VOLUME ::
1 bottle : can
2 knob : radio
3 scale : height
4 gram : weight
5 juice : vitamin
There Will Always Be a Direct and Necessary Relationship between the Words in the Stem Pair
You can express the relationship between the two stem words by making a short sentence that we call a bridge. Your goals when you build an analogy bridge should be to keep it as short and as clear as possible.
For the analogy above, a strong bridge would be:
A LITER is by definition a measure of VOLUME.
WHAT’S A STEM PAIR?
Analogy questions consist of two words—the stem pair—that are separated by a colon. Stem pairs look like this:
PREPARATION : SUCCESS ::
Try to Build a “Bridge” before Looking at the Answer Choices
Because the GRE CAT is a standardized test, you’ll find that certain kinds of bridges appear on the test over and over again. At Kaplan, we call these frequently appearing bridges Classic Bridges. Getting familiar with Classic Bridges now will help you quickly recognize these relationships when you encounter them on the GRE CAT.
WHAT’S A BRIDGE?
A bridge is a short sentence that connects the two words in the stem pair. You should always build a bridge before you look at the answer choices.
The Five Classic Bridges
1. Definition (“is always” or “is never”)
2. Function or Purpose
3. Lack
4. Characteristic Actions or Items
5. Degree (sometimes to the point of excess)
Each of the five classic bridges are illustrated below:
1. The Definition Bridge CYGNET : SWAN A CYGNET is a young SWAN
2. The Function or Purpose Bridge TRUSS : SUPPORT A TRUSS is used as a SUPPORT
3. The Lack Bridge LOUT : GRACE A LOUT lacks GRACE.
4. The Characteristic Actions or Items Bridge SKUNK : SCENT A SKUNK defends itself with its SCENT.
5. The Degree Bridge (sometimes to the point of excess) INTEREST : ENTHRALL To INTEREST greatly is to ENTHRALL.
Remember the five classic bridges and keep them in mind as you practice for the GRE.
Watch Out for Common Wrong Answer Types
Because the bridges on GRE Analogies are predictable, wrong answer types to these questions are also predictable. If you get stumped on any GRE analogy, you can earn points by ruling out as many wrong answer choices as you can and then picking from the remaining choices. Here are some of the typical wrong answer choices that appear on GRE Analogies:
WHAT MAKES A STRONG BRIDGE?
You might think that the words apple and pie have a strong bridge. Don’t be fooled. You can make many things other than pies out of apples, such as apple juice and apple sauce. And there are many different types of pies. Apple and fruit, on the other hand, do have a strong bridge. An apple is a type of fruit. This is always true: It’s a strong, definite relationship.
Unrelated Words
A pair of words with no strong relationship is a common wrong answer.
Same Subject Trap
The words in the answer choice are in the same fields (or have the same subject) as the words in the stem pair, but don’t have the same bridge.
“Both Are” Bridges
This involves words that aren’t related to each other, but are both related to a third word. For instance, the words bracelet : necklace refer to pieces of jewelry. Yet a bracelet has no necessary connection to a necklace.
Context Traps
These are words that often appear together in context, but don’t have any relationship; for instance, mitigating : circumstance.
Reverse Analogy
The bridge would be right if the order of the words were reversed.
Au Contraire or Opposite Bridge
The bridge is the exact opposite of the bridge between the words in the stem pair.
Irrelevant Bridge
The bridge is strong, but it doesn’t have anything to do with the bridge in the stem pair.
Drill
Identify the Classic Bridges in the following stem pairs.
Now build a bridge for each of the following stem pairs.
THE KAPLAN FOUR-STEP METHOD FOR ANALOGIES
Now that you have learned the basics for tackling Analogies questions, you’re ready for Kaplan’s strategic approach to Analogies on the GRE. Approaching Analogies in a systematic manner is the best way to avoid common pitfalls and improve your score.
Find a strong bridge between the stem words.
• In most cases, the more precisely you can express the connection between the two words, the better. A precise formulation is more likely to help you find the right answer.
Plug the answer choices into the bridge.
• Look for the answer choice pair that has the same relationship as the stem pair.
• Immediately eliminate answer choices that don’t fit the bridge.
• Always try all the answer choices; you might find that more than one answer choice works with the bridge that you built.
• If only one answer choice works with the bridge you built, select that answer choice.
Adjust the bridge, if necessary.
• If more than one answer choice works, you’ll have to narrow your bridge (make it more precise).
• If none of the answer choices work, you probably need to expand it (make it more general).
• Consider alternate definitions for the stem words. Perhaps your bridge uses the wrong definition of a word.
If stuck, build bridges between answer choice pairs and work backwards.
• Eliminate all answer choices that have no strong bridge.
• Eliminate all answer choices that have an identical bridge to another answer choice.
• Beware of answer choices that reverse the bridge.
Try It Out
Let’s apply the Kaplan Four-Step Method for Analogies to an example.
2. HANGAR : AIRCRAFT : :
1 orchestra : music
2 vault : money
3 hand : fingers
4 farm : trees
5 ecosystem : insect
Begin by building a bridge: A HANGAR is a place built to keep AIRCRAFT.
Now plug each of your answer choices into your bridge “a BLANK is a place to keep BLANK.”
Is an orchestra a place built to keep music? No. Eliminate choice (1).
Is a vault a place built to keep money? Yes, so keep choice (2).
Is a hand a place built to keep a fingers? No, so eliminate this choice as well.
Is a farm a place built to keep a trees? Maybe, maybe not. Eliminate choice (4).
Is an ecosystem a place built to keep insects? No. Eliminate choice (5).
There is no need to adjust the bridge, since only answer choice (2) worked.
If we needed to work backwards, we could have eliminated choices (4) and (5), since there is no strong bridge between the words in these pairs.
Now try the following Analogy questions on your own, using the Kaplan Four-Step Method. Give yourself a maximum of 30–45 seconds to do each example.
1. LUCID : OBSCURITY ::
1 ambiguous : doubt
2 provident : planning
3 furtive : legality
4 economical : extravagance
5 secure : violence
2. ATTENTIVE : RAPT ::
1 loyal : unscrupulous
2 critical : derisive
3 inventive : innovative
4 jealous : envious
5 kind : considerate
3. CLEAVER : BUTCHER ::
1 palette : artist
2 stage : dancer
3 dictionary : poet
4 lock : burglar
5 chisel : sculptor
Think about how you solved these Analogies questions. To maximize your score, it’s important to start practicing these skills now. On the pages that follow, you’ll find sets of GRE Analogies practice questions that will help you to hone your skills with this question type. Try these practice sets under timed conditions, moving from one question to the next at a rapid pace. Complete, strategic explanations to all of these questions follow so that you can check your answers and learn the most efficient means for completing each question correctly.
The answers to this section appear on the next page.
Testlike Questions
1. (4)
2. (2)
Drill
1. Definition
2. Lack
3. Function
4. Degree
5. Characteristic Items/Actions
1. A CHICKEN is by definition a type of POULTRY.
2. To experience extreme FEAR is by definition to experience TERROR.
3. The purpose of a LOOM is by definition to WEAVE.
4. A RECLUSE is by definition SOLITARY.
5. Someone who’s LANGUID is by definition lacking in ENERGY.
Practice Set
1. (4)
2. (2)
3. (5)
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: In each question below, a related pair of words is followed by five lettered pairs of words. Choose the one pair that best expresses a relationship similar to that expressed in the original pair.
1. CYGNET : SWAN ::
1 ring : jewel
2 kid : goat
3 gander : goose
4 stamp : seal
5 message : pigeon
2. LEGIBLE : DECIPHER ::
1 intelligible : understand
2 cautious : tread
3 laudable : expect
4 nefarious : construe
5 written : write
3. DEHYDRATION : SATURATED ::
1 antagonism : irksome
2 restitution : paid
3 bankruptcy : wealthy
4 modernization : destructive
5 colonization : new
4. CASTIGATE : WRONGDOING ::
1 congratulate : success
2 amputate : crime
3 annotate : consultation
4 deface : falsehood
5 fulminate : habit
5. CUR : BASE ::
1 victor : defeated
2 octogenarian : wise
3 genius : twisted
4 villain : evil
5 athlete : heavy
6. SUBSTANTIAL : AMOUNT ::
1 sufficient : effort
2 compulsory : importance
3 imperative : desperation
4 extensive : size
5 simplistic : intelligence
7. PARTY : POLICY ::
1 libation : law
2 faith : doctrine
3 state : petition
4 clan : opposition
5 public : outcry
8. PATHETIC : RUTH ::
1 cryptic : puzzlement
2 lowly : suffering
3 wrong : punishment
4 beautiful : sorrow
5 crippled : loathing
9. SKUNK : SCENT ::
1 tiger : stripes
2 elephant : trunk
3 fawn : camouflage
4 porcupine : quills
5 shark : fins
10. LOUT : GRACE ::
1 pedant : knowledge
2 poltroon : courage
3 elder : wisdom
4 aristocrat : manner
5 impostor : identity
1. Choice (2)
A CYGNET is a young SWAN.
Is a ring a young jewel? No. Eliminate.
Is a kid a young goat? Yes. Keep this one.
Is a gander a young goose? No, so eliminate.
Is a stamp a young seal? No. Eliminate.
Is a message a young pigeon? Nope. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Working backwards, a ring can contain jewels, but doesn’t have to. A kid is a young goat, and a gander is a male goose. A stamp can be used as a seal, but not necessarily. And a message can be carried by a pigeon, but doesn’t need to be. Only choices (2) and (3) work, and (3) is a “same subject” temptation—beware.
2. Choice (1)
Something LEGIBLE is easy to DECIPHER.
Is something intelligible easy to understand? Yes. Keep this one.
Is something cautious easy to tread? No. Eliminate.
Is something laudable easy to expect? No. Eliminate.
Is something nefarious easy to construe? No. Eliminate.
Is something written easy to write? No. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Working backwards, there is no strong bridge between cautious and tread or between laudable and expect. It’s rare that the GRE would have the right answer contain two forms of the same word, such as in answer choice (5). So even if you don’t recognize nefarious, which means “evil,” you can eliminate several choices.
3. Choice (3)
Something characterized by DEHYDRATION is not SATURATED.
Is something characterized by antagonism not irksome? No. Eliminate.
Is something characterized by restitution not paid? No. Eliminate.
Is something characterized by bankruptcy not wealthy? Yes, so keep this one.
Is something characterized by modernization not destructive? No. Eliminate.
Is something characterized by colonization not new? No. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Working backwards, there is no strong bridge for answer choices (4) or (5). Antagonism and irksome are similar, as an antagonist is often irksome to others. Likewise, restitution is compensation, or payment.
4. Choice (1)
People CASTIGATE others for their WRONGDOINGs.
Do people congratulate others for their success? Yes. Keep this one.
Do people amputate others for their crimes? No. Eliminate.
Do people annotate others for their consultations? No. Eliminate.
Do people deface others for their falsehoods? No. Eliminate.
Do people fulminate others for their habits? No. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Working backwards, there is no strong bridge between amputate and crime or between annotate and consultation. Deface means “to disfigure,” which doesn’t have a strong bridge to falsehood. Fulminate means “to explode,” which doesn’t have anything to do with habits.
5. Choice (4)
A CUR is characterized by being BASE.
Is a victor characterized by being defeated? Nope.
Is an octogenarian characterized by being wise? Not necessarily.
Is a genius characterized by being twisted? No. Eliminate.
Is a villain characterized as being evil? Yep. Keep this choice.
Is an athlete characterized as being heavy? Not necessarily.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Working backwards, there is no strong bridge between athlete and heavy, nor is there a strong bridge between twisted and genius.
6. Choice (4)
SUBSTANTIAL is large in AMOUNT.
Is sufficient large in effort? No, sufficient is enough effort. Eliminate.
Is compulsory large in importance? No, it’s a required performance. Eliminate.
Is imperative large in desperation? No. Eliminate.
Is extensive large in size? That’s pretty good. Keep this choice.
Is simplistic large in intelligence? No. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Working backwards, there is no strong bridge between imperative and desperation.
7. Choice (2)
Members of a PARTY share a common POLICY.
Do members of a libation share a common law? Makes no sense, as a libation is a drink. Eliminate.
Do members of a faith share a common doctrine? This one works.
Do members of a state share a common petition? No. Eliminate.
Do members of a clan share a common opposition? No. Eliminate.
Do members of a public share a common outcry?
Possibly, but a public can also be divided. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Working backward, there is no strong bridge between state and petition or clan and opposition. Eliminate these choices right away.
8. Choice (1)
Something PATHETIC causes others to feel RUTH (which means “mercy” or “sympathy.” Perhaps you know the word ruthless).
Does something cryptic cause others to feel puzzlement? Yes. Keep this one.
Does something lowly cause others to feel suffering?
No, usually the lowly individual feels suffering.
Does something wrong cause others to feel punishment? No. Eliminate.
Does something beautiful cause others to feel sorrow?
No. Usually, beauty has the opposite effect. Eliminate.
Does something crippled cause others to feel loathing?
No. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Working backwards, there is no strong bridge between wrong and punishment or between crippled and loathing. Eliminate these two choices.
9. Choice (4)
A SKUNK defends itself with its SCENT.
Does a tiger does not defend itself with its stripes? No, it uses its stripes to hide itself while it stalks prey.
An elephant does not use its trunk specifically for defense. Eliminate.
A fawn does not defend itself with its camouflage; the camouflage simply helps it hide. A fawn does not physically defend itself using the camouflage.
A porcupine does indeed defend itself with its quills. Keep this one.
Does a shark defend itself with its fins? No. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
You can eliminate choice (5), because a shark swims with its fins, and a skunk doesn’t use its scent for any sort of locomotion.
10. Choice (2)
A LOUT lacks GRACE.
Does a pedant lack knowledge? No, he is annoying because of the way he spouts his knowledge.
Does a poltroon (whimpering coward) lack courage? Yes. Keep this choice.
Does a elder lack wisdom? No, in fact, in most cultures elders are considered the wisest. Eliminate.
Does an aristocrat lack manner? Depends what type of manner you’re talking about. Eliminate.
Does an impostor lack identity? No, an impostor takes over someone else’s identity. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choice (4) can be eliminated right away because there’s no real bridge between aristocrat and manner.Manner is a general term for fashion or style. People don’t lack manner, they just have different manners.
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: In each question below, a related pair of words is followed by five lettered pairs of words. Choose the one pair that best expresses a relationship similar to that expressed in the original pair.
1. RECANTATION : BELIEF ::
1 repetition : catechism
2 reincarnation : soul
3 untruth : axiom
4 vacillation : vow
5 repeal : law
2. CEPHALIC : SKULL ::
1 notable : achievement
2 cylindrical : vertebrae
3 neural : nerves
4 angular : scapula
5 audible : apparition
3. PLUMMET : DESCEND ::
1 kick : boot
2 whirl : turn
3 indicate : show
4 decorate : nullify
5 begin : conclude
4. RIG : TEAM ::
1 train : locomotive
2 steamer : piston
3 sled : rail
4 car : truck
5 windjammer : crew
5. INTEREST : ENTHRALL ::
1 corrupt : tempt
2 squeeze : crush
3 buoy : undergird
4 abstain : surrender
5 reproach : scold
6. ENLISTMENT : CONSCRIPTION ::
1 rapprochement : arbitration
2 surrender : bombardment
3 resignation : dismissal
4 contemplation : instruction
5 acceptance : rejection
7. COBBLER : LEATHER ::
1 chandler : wax
2 executrix : paper
3 actor : words
4 cartwright : wheels
5 prosthetist : limbs
8. ELECTRICITY : WIRE ::
1 fluid : pipe
2 car : highway
3 river : bank
4 light : bulb
5 music : instrument
9. INFLAMMABLE : IGNITED ::
1 fragile : shattered
2 flexible : broken
3 somber : mourned
4 famous : plagiarized
5 small : magnified
10. SCOLD : BERATE ::
1 predict : foresee
2 threaten : impend
3 counsel : advise
4 retreat : retire
5 respect : venerate
1. Choice (5)
A RECANTATION is the withdrawal of a BELIEF.
Is a repetition the withdrawal of a catechism? No, there’s no bridge between these words. Eliminate.
Is a reincarnation the withdrawal of a soul? No. Eliminate.
Is an untruth the withdrawal of an axiom? No. Eliminate.
Is a vacillation the withdrawal of a vow? No. Eliminate.
Is a repeal the withdrawal of a law? Yes. Since no other choice works with this bridge, this is your answer.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
None of the other choices have strong bridges.
2. Choice (3)
CEPHALIC means having to do with the SKULL.
Does notable mean having to do with achievement? No, although this is a common phrase. Eliminate.
Does cylindrical mean having to do with vertebrae? No. Eliminate.
Does neural mean having to do with nerves? Yes. Keep this alternative.
Does angular mean having to do with the scapula? No. Eliminate.
Does audible mean having to do with an apparition? No. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
None of the other choices have strong bridges.
3. Choice (2)
To PLUMMET is to DESCEND furiously or with great speed.
Kick and boot are synonymous; they aren’t degrees of one another. Eliminate.
To whirl is to turn furiously. Keep this choice.
Indicate is synonymous with show. Eliminate.
Decorate and nullify have no strong bridge. Eliminate. Begin and conclude are antonyms. They don’t match our bridge, so eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Eliminate choice (4) because there’s no strong bridge. Eliminate (1) and (3) because the answer choices have the same bridge.
4. Choice (1)
A RIG is pulled by a TEAM.
Is a train pulled by a locomotive? Yep. Keep it.
Is a steamer pulled by a piston? No. Eliminate.
Is a sled pulled by a rail? No. Eliminate.
Is a car pulled by a truck? No. Eliminate.
Is a windjammer pulled by a crew? No. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Answer choices (2) and (3) don’t have strong bridges.
5. Choice (2)
To INTEREST greatly is to ENTHRALL.
Is to corrupt greatly to tempt? While these words are used together, they don’t share this bridge.
Is to squeeze greatly to crush? Yes. Keep this choice.
Is to buoy greatly to undergird? No. Eliminate.
Is to abstain greatly to surrender? No. If you surrender, you fail to abstain from something. Eliminate.
Is to reproach greatly to scold? No, these words are synonyms. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (1) and (3) do not have strong bridges, so eliminate them.
6. Choice (3)
ENLISTMENT is voluntary, while CONSCRIPTION is forced.
Is rapprochement voluntary while arbitration is forced?
No, neither is usually voluntary. Eliminate.
Is surrender voluntary while bombardment is forced?
No. Surrender is not a voluntary form of bombardment. Eliminate.
Is resignation voluntary while dismissal is forced? Yes. Keep it.
Is contemplation voluntary while instruction is forced? No. Eliminate.
Is acceptance voluntary while rejection is forced? No, these words are antonyms. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (1), (2), and (4) have no strong bridges, so eliminate.
7. Choice (1)
A COBBLER’s raw material is LEATHER.
Is a chandler’s raw material wax? Yes, a chandler makes candles. Keep this choice.
Is an executrix’s raw material paper? No, an executrix is a female executor. Eliminate.
Is an actor’s raw material words? Not really.
Is a cartwright’s raw material wheels? No; although cartwright is the name for someone who makes wheels, wheels aren’t a raw material. Eliminate.
Is a prosthetist’s raw material limbs? No. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (2) and (3) don’t have strong bridges, so eliminate them.
8. Choice (1)
ELECTRICITY runs through a man-made conduit called a WIRE.
Do fluids run through a man-made conduit called a pipe? Yes. Keep this one.
Do cars run through a man-made conduit called a highway? No, they run on a highway. Eliminate.
Does a river run through a man-made conduit called a bank? No, a bank is the side of the river, not a conduit.
Does light run through a bulb? No, it is emitted by a bulb. Eliminate.
Does music run through an instrument? No, it is created by an instrument. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Eliminate (4) and (5) because they have the same bridge.
9. Choice (1)
INFLAMMABLE means easily IGNITED. Be careful—in this case IN doesn’t mean “not.”
Does fragile mean easily shattered? Yes. Keep it.
Does flexible mean easily broken? No, flexible things are usually harder to break. Eliminate.
Is something somber easily mourned? No. Someone who’s somber may be in mourning. Eliminate.
Is something famous easily plagiarized? There’s no strong bridge here. Eliminate.
Is something small easily magnified? No. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (3), (4), and (5) all lack strong bridges.
10. Choice (5)
To SCOLD greatly is to BERATE.
Is to predict greatly to foresee? No, these words are synonyms. Eliminate.
Is to threaten greatly to impend? No. Eliminate.
Is to counsel greatly to advise? No, these are synonyms. Eliminate.
Is to retreat greatly to retire? No. Eliminate.
Is to respect greatly to venerate? Yes. Since this is the only choice that works, it’s the answer.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
You can eliminate (1) and (3) because they have the same bridge.
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: In each question below, a related pair of words is followed by five lettered pairs of words. Choose the one pair that best expresses a relationship similar to that expressed in the original pair.
1. TRUSS : SUPPORT ::
1 calcium : bone
2 fence : barrier
3 tile : patio
4 wood : burn
5 tobacco : cigarette
2. REEL : TAPE ::
1 ball : string
2 turntable : record
3 tire : wheel
4 skein : yarn
5 spool : thread
3. SHINGLE : ROOF ::
1 rind : melon
2 armor : knight
3 feather : wing
4 patch : cloth
5 canopy : bed
4. LEGERDEMAIN : MAGICIAN ::
1 rhetoric : orator
2 baggage : immigrant
3 justice : lawyer
4 map : cartographer
5 tractor : farmer
5. INDISPUTABLE : QUESTION ::
1 unlikely : know
2 amoral : perform
3 incredible : prove
4 immutable : change
5 insoluble : submerge
6. UNSCATHED : DAMAGE ::
1 ameliorated : improvement
2 obliterated : invisibility
3 rolled : flatness
4 shaken : homogeneity
5 arid : dampness
7. PROTRACTION : DURATION ::
1 extension : length
2 retraction : instant
3 corruption : truth
4 taxation : wealth
5 altercation : shape
8. CHARACTERIZATION : PARODY ::
1 serialization : novel
2 drama : musical
3 theater : vaudeville
4 saga : epic
5 portrait : caricature
9. STARS : GALAXY ::
1 cells : prison
2 sand : dune
3 nuclei : atom
4 eggs : nest
5 hair : head
10. ATROPHY : INACTIVITY ::
1 resistance : timidity
2 frown : anger
3 growth : youth
4 rot : refrigeration
5 debt : overspending
1. Choice (2)
A TRUSS is used as a SUPPORT.
Is a calcium used as a bone? No. Calcium is one of the elements that make up bones. Eliminate.
Is a fence used as a barrier? Yes, keep this choice.
Is a tile used as a patio? No, sometimes tiles are coverings on patios. Eliminate.
Is wood used to burn? It could be, but wood is also used for other things. Eliminate.
Is tobacco used to cigarette? No, tobacco is part of a cigarette. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
You can eliminate (3) and (4) because they lack strong bridges.
2. Choice (5)
A REEL is an object that TAPE winds around.
Is a ball an object that string winds around? No, string forms a ball when wound. Eliminate.
Is a turntable an object that a record winds around? No. Eliminate.
Is a tire an object that a wheel winds around? No, a tire sits on a wheel. Eliminate.
Is a skein an object that yarn winds around? No, a bunch of yarn is called a skein. Eliminate.
Is a spool an object that thread winds around? Yes. Here’s your answer.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
You can eliminate (1) and (4) because they have the same bridge.
3. Choice (3)
Many SHINGLEs make up the outer covering of a ROOF.
A melon only has one rind. Eliminate.
Many armors do not make up the outer covering of a knight. Eliminate.
Many feathers make up the outer covering of a wing. Keep it.
A patch is a small piece of cloth. Eliminate.
A canopy is a cloth that sits above a bed, but can be used in many other places as well. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
You can eliminate (5) because it lacks a strong bridge.
4. Choice (1)
LEGERDEMAIN is a skill used by a MAGICIAN.
Rhetoric is a skill used by an orator. Keep this one.
Baggage is not a skill used by an immigrant. Eliminate.
Justice is not a skill used by a lawyer. Eliminate.
A map is a product of a cartographer, not a skill used by one. Eliminate.
A tractor is machinery used by a farmer, but isn’t a skill as legerdemain is. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
You can eliminate (3) because it lacks a strong bridge.
5. Choice (4)
Something that’s INDISPUTABLE cannot be QUESTIONed.
The statement “something unlikely cannot be known” doesn’t make sense. Eliminate.
There’s no bridge between amoral and perform. Eliminate.
Can something that’s incredible not be proved? No, it’s just hard to believe. Eliminate.
Can something that’s immutable not be changed? True. Keep this choice.
Can something insoluble be submerged ? Yes, but it can’t be dissolved. Eliminate this choice.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
(1), (2), and (5) lack a strong bridge.
6. Choice (5)
Something UNSCATHED lacks DAMAGE.
Does something ameliorated lack improvement? No. Eliminate.
Does something obliterated lack invisibility? No. Eliminate.
Does something rolled lack flatness? No, things are usually rolled to make them flat. Eliminate.
Does something shaken lack homogeneity? No, shaking usually increases homogeneity. Eliminate.
Does something arid lack dampness? Yes. Since this is the only choice that works, it’s the answer.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
You can eliminate (1) and (2) because they lack a strong bridge.
7. Choice (1)
A PROTRACTION is an increase in DURATION.
An extension is an increase in length. Keep this one.
A retraction isn’t an increase of anything. Eliminate.
Corruption is not an increase in truth. Eliminate.
Taxation is not an increase in wealth. At least not if you’re the one being taxed. Eliminate.
An altercation is not an increase in shape. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
None of the wrong answer choices has a strong bridge.
8. Choice (5)
A CHARACTERIZATION that is exaggerated is a PARODY.
A serialization is a novel that appears in several parts. Eliminate.
A drama may or may not be a musical. Eliminate.
A theater may feature vaudeville, but there’s no necessary link. Eliminate.
A saga and an epic are both literary works. Eliminate.
A portrait that is exaggerated is a caricature. Since this is the only choice that works, it’s the answer.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
You can eliminate (2) and (3) because they lack a strong bridge.
9. Choice (2)
STARS make up a GALAXY.
Do cells make up a prison? Not exclusively—there are also offices, cafeterias, etc. Eliminate.
Does sand make up a dune? Yes. Keep it.
Do nuclei make up an atom? No, one nucleus and other particles (electrons) make up an atom. Eliminate.
Do eggs make up a nest ? No, they rest in one. Eliminate.
Does hair make up a head ? No. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
You can eliminate (1) and (3) because they lack a strong bridge.
10. Choice (5)
ATROPHY is caused by INACTIVITY.
Resistance is not be caused by timidity, but rather by boldness. Eliminate.
A frown may be caused by anger, but it may also be caused by other emotions. Eliminate.
Growth and youth have no strong bridge. Eliminate.
Rot is usually caused by a lack of refrigeration. Eliminate.
Debt is caused by overspending. Since this is the only choice that works, it’s the answer.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
You can eliminate (1), (2), and (3) because they lack a strong bridge.
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: In each question below, a related pair of words is followed by five lettered pairs of words. Choose the one pair that best expresses a relationship similar to that expressed in the original pair.
1. PROPONENT : THEORY ::
1 nonbeliever : sin
2 traitor : country
3 adherent : belief
4 attorney : law
5 scientist : hypothesis
2. DISCHARGED : SOLDIER ::
1 fired : cannon
2 graduated : student
3 appointed : judge
4 transferred : employee
5 docked : salary
3. OUTFOX : STRATEGY ::
1 outdo : trickery
2 defeat : stamina
3 outlast : force
4 victimize : terror
5 outrun : speed
4. COAX : BLANDISHMENTS ::
1 amuse : platitudes
2 compel : threats
3 deter : tidings
4 batter : insults
5 exercise : antics
5. TITLED : NOBLE ::
1 elected : president
2 acclaimed : artist
3 commissioned : officer
4 deposed : ruler
5 initiated : argument
6. NOD : ASSENT ::
1 glance : beneficence
2 shudder : rudeness
3 wink : mystification
4 shrug : indifference
5 frown : capriciousness
7. EPIC : VERSE ::
1 story : odyssey
2 symphony : song
3 saga : prose
4 freeway : asphalt
5 musical : play
8. NOMADIC : SEDENTARY ::
1 transitory : temporary
2 excessive : sumptuary
3 loquacious : taciturn
4 expressive : elegant
5 garrulous : bombastic
9. IRK : SOOTHING ::
1 inspire : elevating
2 support : undermining
3 provoke : irritating
4 denounce : vilifying
5 laud : conciliating
10. FERVID : EMOTIONAL ::
1 zealous : talkative
2 ravenous : hungry
3 torpid : energetic
4 angry : outrageous
5 eager : hopeful
1. Choice (3)
A PROPONENT is one who agrees with a THEORY.
A nonbeliever doesn’t agree with sin. Eliminate.
A traitor betrays a country, he doesn’t agree with it.
Eliminate.
An adherent agrees with a belief. Keep this.
Attorneys don’t necessarily agree with a law. Eliminate.
A scientist doesn’t necessarily agree with a hypothesis. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (1) and (4) don’t have strong bridges.
2. Choice (2)
A DISCHARGED SOLDIER is one whose term has ended.
A fired cannon can be reloaded. Eliminate.
A graduated student is one whose term has ended. That works, so keep it.
A judge is often appointed, but can be elected, so there’s no strong bridge.
An employee may or may not be transferred. Again, no strong bridge. Eliminate.
Some people have their salary docked, but the words don’t have anything to do with the end of a term.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
None of the wrong answer choices has a strong bridge.
3. Choice (5)
To OUTFOX is to use superior STRATEGY.
To outdo means to defeat, not necessarily to use superior trickery. Eliminate.
Defeat does not necessarily involve stamina, so there’s no strong bridge here.
Outlasting something involves stamina, not force.
Eliminate.
Victimizing someone may or may not include terror. Eliminate.
To outrun is to use superior speed. This works, so keep it.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
None of the wrong answer choices has a strong bridge.
4. Choice (2)
You COAX someone by using BLANDISHMENTS (flattering remarks).
Platitudes are trite statements, and aren’t usually amusing. Eliminate.
You compel someone by using threats. Keep this choice.
You don’t deter someone by using tidings. Eliminate.
You don’t batter someone with insults. Battering is a physical process. Eliminate.
You can’t exercise someone with antics? No, there’s no bridge here. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
None of the wrong answer choices has strong bridges.
5. Choice (3)
When one is TITLED, one is a NOBLE.
When one is elected, one may be president, but may also hold a variety of other offices.
When one is acclaimed, one may or may not be an artist. There’s no strong bridge here.
When one is commissioned, one becomes an officer. Keep this one.
When one is deposed, one is no longer a ruler. Eliminate.
There’s no bridge between initiated and argument. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (2) and (5) lack a strong bridge.
6. Choice (4)
A NOD is a gesture of ASSENT.
A glance is simply a look, not necessarily a gesture of beneficence. Eliminate.
A shudder is usually a gesture of fear, not of rudeness. Eliminate.
A wink is not a gesture of mystification.
A shrug is a gesture of indifference, so keep this choice.
A frown is not a gesture of capriciousness (whimsy). Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
None of the wrong answer choices has a strong bridge.
7. Choice (3)
An EPIC is a narrative written in VERSE.
A story is not a narrative written in odyssey. Eliminate. Symphony and song have no strong bridge, although they both deal with music. Eliminate.
A saga is a narrative written in prose. Keep this choice.
A freeway is not written in anything, although it’s covered by asphalt. Eliminate.
A musical is a type of play, but isn’t written in play. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
8. Choice (3)
Someone NOMADIC is not SEDENTARY.
Something transitory is temporary. Eliminate.
If anything, something excessive may be characterized as sumptuous. Eliminate.
Someone loquacious (very talkative) is not taciturn (quiet). This makes sense, so keep it.
Someone expressive may or may not be elegant.
There’s no strong bridge here. Eliminate.
Someone garrulous is very talkative. Someone bombastic is pompous. These things don’t necessarily relate to each other. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Eliminate (4) and (5) because they lack a strong bridge.
9. Choice (2)
Something that IRKs is not SOOTHING.
Something that inspires is elevating. Eliminate.
Something that supports is not undermining. Keep this one.
Something that provokes can be irritating, although it doesn’t have to be. Eliminate.
Something that denounces can vilify. Eliminate.
Something that lauds (praises) may well be conciliating (pleasing). Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (3) and (5) lack strong bridges.
10. Choice (2)
FERVID is extremely EMOTIONAL.
Someone zealous is not very talkative, but rather is very committed to a goal. Eliminate.
Ravenous is indeed extremely hungry. Keep this one, but check the others.
Torpid means lacking energy, so this bridge is the reverse of ours. Eliminate.
Angry and outrageous lack a strong bridge. Eliminate.
Eager means “having great interest,” hopeful has no connection here. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
You can eliminate (1), (4), and (5) because they lack strong bridges.
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: In each question below, a related pair of words is followed by five lettered pairs of words. Choose the one pair that best expresses a relationship similar to that expressed in the original pair.
1. DAMPEN : RESTRAIN ::
1 stagnate : flow
2 purify : liquefy
3 dilate : expand
4 melt : disband
5 stabilize : instill
2. COUNTERFEIT : AUTHENTICITY ::
1 wayward : mutability
2 refined : unpredictability
3 methodical : fallibility
4 elaborate : simplicity
5 natural : affinity
3. DROSS : METAL ::
1 sawdust : wood
2 coke : steel
3 sludge : wine
4 ozone : atmosphere
5 fossil : dinosaur
4. PANDEMONIUM : AGITATION ::
1 inception : knowledge
2 greisen : quartz
3 bliss : joy
4 lethargy : activity
5 dereliction : poverty
5. FICKLE : STEADFAST ::
1 theocentric : complacent
2 disloyal : traitorous
3 ingenuous : naive
4 fatuous : wise
5 relenting : idiosyncratic
6. COMPENDIOUS : BRIEF ::
1 tacit : silent
2 colossal : small
3 dilated : constricted
4 explosive : emotional
5 recalcitrant : deferent
7. LAVISH : SPARTAN ::
1 perforated : punctured
2 perfidious : artless
3 decorous : tinted
4 unadorned : bare
5 extravagant : lively
8. MENDACIOUS : VERACITY ::
1 nosy : inquisitiveness
2 irreproachable : isolation
3 amoral : fidelity
4 tardy : punctuality
5 dubious : question
9. ARCANUM : SECRECY ::
1 quest : confidentiality
2 guffaw : anger
3 grudge : generosity
4 slumber : arousal
5 genius : intelligence
10. ARCHIVE : RECORDS ::
1 box : shoes
2 locker : uniform
3 arsenal: arms
4 pantry : bread
5 arsenide : death
1. Choice (3)
When you DAMPEN something, you RESTRAIN it (such as when you dampen emotions).
When something stagnates, it stops flowing. Eliminate. You don’ t have to liquefy something to purify it, so there’s no bridge here. Eliminate.
When you dilate something, you expand it. Keep this.
When you melt something, you don’t disband it. Again, no strong bridge. Eliminate.
When you stabilize something, you make it steadier. Instill means “to plant.” Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (2), (4), and (5) don’t have strong bridges.
2. Choice (4)
Something that is COUNTERFEIT lacks AUTHENTICITY.
Something that is wayward (that has gone astray) has nothing to do with mutability (the ability to be changed). Eliminate.
Something refined may or may not lack unpredictability. Eliminate.
Something methodical can still be fallible. Eliminate.
Something elaborate lacks simplicity. Keep this choice.
Natural and affinity don’t have a strong bridge, as affinity means “liking” or “attraction.” These two words are often used together, but that doesn’t give them a strong GRE Analogy bridge. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (1), (2), and (3) lack strong bridges.
3. Choice (1)
DROSS is a waste product from working with METAL.
Sawdust is a waste product from working with wood. Keep this choice.
Coke is a residue of coal, not steel. Eliminate.
Sludge has nothing to do with wine. Eliminate.
Ozone is part of the atmosphere, not a waste product. Eliminate.
A fossil can be the remains of a dinosaur, but it can be the remains of other organisms as well. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (2) and (3) lack strong bridges.
4. Choice (3)
PANDEMONIUM is a state of extreme AGITATION.
Inception means “beginning,” and has no definitive connection with knowledge. Eliminate.
Greisen is a rock made up partially of quartz. Eliminate.
Bliss is a state of extreme joy. Keep this one.
Lethargy is a lack of activity. Eliminate.
Dereliction : poverty may be tempting, since derelicts are often poor, but dereliction means neglect, not poverty. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (1) and (2) lack strong bridges.
5. Choice (4)
One who’s FICKLE is not STEADFAST.
There is no strong bridge between theocentric (centered around a god) and complacent, so eliminate.
Someone who is extremely disloyal is traitorous, but this is the reverse of our bridge. Eliminate.
Someone who is ingenuous is often naive. Again, this is the reverse of our bridge.
Someone fatuous (silly, foolish) is not wise, so keep this choice.
Relenting and idiosyncratic (quirky) have no strong bridge. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (1) and (5) lack strong bridges.
6. Choice (1)
Something COMPENDIOUS is BRIEF.
Something tacit is silent. Keep this choice.
Something colossal is definitely not small. Eliminate.
Something dilated is expanded, not constricted. Eliminate.
Something explosive could be emotional (such as an explosive personality), but not necessarily (an explosive compound). Eliminate.
Something recalcitrant (resistant) is anything but deferent (submissive). Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choice (4) lacks a strong bridge, and the other three wrong answer choices have “are not” as a bridge.
7. Choice (2)
Something LAVISH (extravagant) is not SPARTAN (bare or unadorned).
Perforated means punctured, so these words are synonyms. Eliminate.
Something perfidious (treacherous) is not artless (without deceit). Keep this choice There’s no link between decorous and tinted. Eliminate.
Something unadorned is bare, so these are synonyms. Eliminate.
Extravagant and lively have no bridge. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (1) and (4) have the same bridge, while choices (3) and (5) lack strong bridges.
8. Choice (4)
Someone who is MENDACIOUS (apt to lie) is not characterized by VERACITY.
Someone who is nosy is characterized by inquisitiveness, but we’re looking for “NOT characterized.” Eliminate.
Someone irreproachable is beyond criticism. Isolation means “alone.” There’s no bridge here. Eliminate.
Someone amoral (lacking morals) may or may not be characterized by a lack of fidelity (faithfulness). To lack morals, to be amoral, is a general failing that may or may not include faithlessness. Eliminate.
Someone who’s tardy is not characterized by punctuality. Keep this choice.
Something dubious deserves to be questioned. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Eliminate (2) and (3) because they lack strong bridges.
9. Choice (5)
An ARCANUM is characterized by SECRECY.
A quest has nothing to do with confidentiality. Eliminate.
A guffaw is a laugh, so it is never caused by anger. Eliminate.
A grudge is a feeling of resentment and doesn’t have anything to do with generosity. Eliminate.
A slumber is not characterized by arousal. Eliminate.
A genius is characterized by intelligence. It’s the only choice that matches our bridge, so it must be right.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
Choices (1) and (3) lack strong bridges.
10. Choice (3)
An ARCHIVE is a place designed for storing RECORDS.
Is a box designed for storing shoes? Some are, but not all boxes. Eliminate.
Is a locker designed for storing a uniform? It’s designed for storing clothes, not necessarily uniforms.
Is an arsenal designed to store arms? Yep. Keep this choice.
Is a pantry designed to store bread? It’s designed to store food, but not necessarily bread. Eliminate.
Arsenide (a compound of arsenic) is not designed to store death, since death can’t really be stored. Eliminate.
There’s no need to adjust the bridge, since only one answer choice worked.
You can eliminate (5) because it lacks a strong bridge.
Antonyms make up about one fourth of the GRE Verbal Section. They are also the Verbal question type that many students find the most difficult to improve their performance on. Antonym questions are designed to test your vocabulary, so your first step in preparing for this question type is to start building your knowledge by using the GRE Vocabulary Builder section of this book. In this chapter, we’ll give you some vocabulary skill-building pointers and show you how to answer Antonym questions strategically. If you approach antonyms strategically, you’ll find that you’ll get many questions right even if you don’t know the exact definitions of the tested words.
The directions for these questions look like this:
Directions: This question consists of a capitalized word that is followed by five words or phrases. Choose the lettered word or phrase whose meaning is most nearly opposite to the meaning of the capitalized word. Because some questions require you to distinguish fine shades of meaning, it is advisable to consider all the choices before deciding on the best choice.
On the GRE, the more questions you get right, the harder the Antonym questions you’ll see. If you perform well on GRE Verbal, you’ll find that using Kaplan’s vocabulary strategies becomes increasingly important on later antonyms.
To improve your skills in answering GRE antonyms, you’ll need to familiarize yourself with the basic principles for approaching them—and you’ll need some practice. The Four Fundamentals below will help you to increase your skills and confidence as you approach the day of the test. And with the skills and confidence, you’ll be able to earn points on Test Day!
Use Kaplan’s Strategies for Decoding Difficult Vocabulary Words
On hard Antonyms, it might seem at first glance as if you don’t know anything about the stem word. However, you need only a little bit of information to guess at a word’s meaning. The following techniques can give you enough of an idea about what the stem word means to solve the question.
Think of a Context in which You’ve Heard the Word Before
You might be able to figure out the meaning of a word from a familiar context; for example, “crimes and misdemeanors,” “mitigating circumstances,” or “abject poverty.”
Look at Word Roots, Stems, and Suffixes
If you don’t know what a particular word means, you might be able to guess its meaning based on your knowledge of one or more of the word’s parts. If you don’t know the meaning of benediction, for example, its prefix (bene, which means good) tells you that its opposite is likely to be something bad. Perhaps the answer will begin with mal, as in malefaction.
Use Your Knowledge of a Romance Language
You might be able to guess a word’s meaning because it sounds like a word you might have learned in foreign language class. You might guess at the word credulous, for instance, because you know the Italian word credere; or you might notice that moratorium sounds like the French word morte or that the word mundane sounds like the Spanish word mundo.
Use the Positive or Negative “Charges” of Words to Help You to Guess an Answer
When all other vocabulary decoding strategies fail, use your ear. If you know a stem word sounds positive, for example, you know that its antonym must be negatively charged—and vice versa! This strategy can work wonders on harder questions. Here’s a sample tough antonym question.
1. SCABROUS:
1 thorny
2 unblemished
3 perplexing
4 blank
5 examined
Notice that SCABROUS sounds harsh—it has a negative (–) charge. Now let’s check out the charges of the answer choices. Both thorny and perplexing are negatively charged, so choices (1) and (3) cannot be antonyms of the stem word. The words blank and examined are neutral, they are neither positive or negative. The only positively charged word here is choice (2), unblemished. This is our answer; SCABROUS means rough or covered with unwholesome patches
BE STRATEGIC
Antonyms are designed to test your vocabulary, but if you attack these questions strategically, you’ll get many questions right even if you don’t know the exact definition.
Watch Out for Common Wrong-Answer Types
Even if you have no idea what the word in the stem means, don’t panic! Eliminating answer choices that you know are wrong will give you a good chance of guessing the right answer. Typical wrong answer types on GRE Antonyms follow.
Words That Have No Clear Opposites
Such words as birthright and priority, and deserve, for example, can’t be antonyms for any stem word!
Any Answer Choices That Have the Same Opposites as Each Other
If two or more of the answer choices have the same antonym, that choice can’t be an antonym for the stem word because then there would be more than one correct answer to the question!
Au Contraire, or Opposite, Answers
These answers mean exactly the opposite of the word you’re looking for. In other words, they are synonyms, rather than antonyms, for the stem word.
Drill
Each of the word lists below relates to two concepts that are opposite in meaning. Practice categorizing words relating to these opposites as a means for preparing for GRE Antonyms. If you are unfamiliar with the meaning of any word, use the strategies for decoding tough vocabulary to decipher its meaning.
Write “harsh” next to those words that are harsh sounding; write “pleasant” next to those words that are pleasant sounding.
Label each word according to its general meaning. Write either “caring” or “indifferent” in the lines provided.
THE KAPLAN FOUR-STEP METHOD FOR ANTONYMS
Now that you have learned the basics, you’re ready to learn Kaplan’s strategic approach to Antonyms on the GRE CAT. Approaching antonyms in a systematic manner is the best way to avoid common traps on the test and improve your score.
Define the stem word.
• Even if you don’t know the precise definition of the word, a general knowledge of the word is usually sufficient.
• Use Kaplan vocabulary strategies, such as looking for familiar roots, to try to get a rough definition of the word.
Define its opposite and prephrase an answer.
• Whenever possible, you should have an idea of what you’re looking for before checking any answer choices.
• Consciously prephrasing an answer will reduce the chance that you’ll select a choice that’s a synonym.
Find the answer choice that best matches your prephrase.
• Sometimes one or more answer choices will be close to your prephrase. Check all the answer choices for the best fit.
• Consider alternate definitions for the stem words. Perhaps you’re using the wrong definition of a word.
Use guessing strategies, if necessary.
• Eliminate any answer choices that have no clear opposite.
• Eliminate answer choices that are synonyms of one another.
• Use word charge and answer choice patterns to avoid other probable wrong answers.
Try It Out
Let’s apply the Kaplan Four-Step Method for Antonyms to an example:
2. TRAIL:
1 age
2 depress
3 rule
4 wander
5 precede
Begin by defining our stem word, TRAIL. What does TRAIL mean? You will notice in this context that trail is a verb. It has to be, because choices (2), (3), and (4) can only be verbs, and the answer choices and the stem word must be the same part of speech. As a verb, TRAIL means “to follow”.
Since TRAIL means “to follow”, we need a word that means “to lead” or “come before.”
Choice (5), precede, means “to come before” so it is the best answer.
If you had to guess, you could have eliminated age and rule, since they have no clear opposite.
Now try the following Antonym questions on your own, using the Kaplan Four-Step Method. Time yourself: Give yourself a maximum of 30–45 seconds to do each example.
1. AMIABLE:
1 faithful
2 insulted
3 distasteful
4 indecent
5 unfriendly
2. ACUTE:
1 conspicuous
2 relevant
3 aloof
4 dull
5 distant
3. RECANT:
1 affirm
2 rectify
3 offend
4 ignore
5 withdraw
Think about how you attacked these antonym questions. To maximize your score, it’s important to start practicing the techniques we covered in this chapter. On the pages that follow, you’ll find sets of GRE Antonym practice questions that will help you to hone your skills with this question type. Try these practice sets under testlike conditions, moving from one question to the next at a rapid pace.
Complete, strategic explanations to all of these questions follow so that you can check your answers and learn the most efficient means for completing each question correctly.
Testlike Questions
1. (2)
2. (5)
Drill
Practice Set
1. (5)
2. (4)
3. (1)
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: Each question below consists of a capitalized word that is followed by five words or phrases. Choose the lettered word or phrase whose meaning is most nearly opposite to the meaning of the capitalized word. Because some questions require you to distinguish fine shades of meaning, it is advisable to consider all the choices before deciding on the best choice.
1. IMPURE:
1 harmonious
2 integral
3 unalloyed
4 assiduous
5 simple
2. SCALE:
1 enlarge
2 collapse
3 moderate
4 weigh
5 descend
3. LEVITY:
1 inequality
2 gravity
3 laxity
4 excitability
5 credulity
4. INTERMINABLE:
1 brief
2 constant
3 external
4 physical
5 separate
5. TRADITIONAL:
1 improvident
2 unconscionable
3 uninhabitable
4 anachronistic
5 iconoclastic
6. ABANDON:
1 arrival
2 presence
3 security
4 restraint
5 deficiency
7. PROBITY:
1 lack of talent
2 dishonesty
3 disinterest
4 lack of simplicity
5 impossibility
8. LOGY:
1 irrational
2 upset
3 alert
4 patient
5 chagrined
9. CEDE:
1 make sense of
2 fail
3 get ahead of
4 flow out of
5 retain
10. PROSCRIBE:
1 risk
2 deny
3 support
4 permit
5 agree
1. Choice (3)
Since the IM prefix means “not,” then something IMPURE is not pure.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “pure.”
Harmonious means “acting in harmony”; usually, it is used to describe pleasing music. Eliminate. Integral means “essential” or “necessary.” Eliminate. Unalloyed means “not alloyed,” or “pure.” Hold onto this one. (If you had trouble working out what unalloyed means, you could have used word roots: UN means “not,” and an alloy is a mixture of two or more metals. So unalloyed means “not a mixture,” which is pretty close to “pure” in meaning.)
Assiduous means hardworking and attentive. Eliminate. Simple is not a synonym for “pure.” Eliminate.
2. Choice (5)
The answer choices tell you that SCALE is being used as a verb. To SCALE is to climb up, as in “scale a mountain.”
The correct answer choice will mean “climb down.”
Enlarge means “make larger.” Eliminate.
Collapse means “to fall down.” Eliminate.
Moderate, as a verb, means “to make less harsh.” Eliminate.
Weigh means “to determine the weight of,” or “to decide between two things.” Eliminate.
Descend means “to climb down.” This is the correct answer.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate collapse and weigh, since they have no clear opposites.
3. Choice (2)
LEVITY means “lightness” and “humor.”
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “seriousness” or “lack of humor.”
Inequality may be a serious issue, but it does not itself mean “seriousness.” Eliminate.
Gravity is not only the force that holds us to Earth, but it also means “seriousness.” This is the correct answer.
Laxity means “slackness” and “lack of rigor.” Eliminate.
Excitability is the measure of how excitable something is. Eliminate.
Credulity means “willingness to believe.” Someone who is credulous believes things easily. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, note that excitability is a neutral word. Unlike excitable, which means “easily excited,” excitability has no clear opposite, and cannot be the answer in this case.
4. Choice (1)
The prefix IN usually means “not,” so something that is INTERMINABLE is not terminable, that is, never ending.
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “short-lived.”
Brief means “short-lived.” This is the correct answer.
Constant means “never changing.” Eliminate.
External means “on the outside.” Eliminate.
Physical relates to material, as opposed to spiritual, things. Eliminate.
Separate does not mean “short-lived.” Eliminate.
5. Choice (5)
Something TRADITIONAL is well established, such as a custom.
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “not well established.”
Improvident means “incautious” or “lacking in foresight.” Eliminate.
Unconscionable means “not restrained by a conscience,” that is, ruthless. Eliminate.
Uninhabitable means “not able to be lived in.” Eliminate.
Anachronistic means “chronologically out of place” (to see a wristwatch in a movie about ancient Rome would be anachronistic). Eliminate.
Iconoclastic means “against tradition,” that is, tending to overthrow any kind of established ideals, beliefs, or custom. This is the correct answer.
If you needed to guess, remember that the prefixes IM, UN, and AN mean “not.” You could use this to eliminate answer choices.
6. Choice (4)
The verb ABANDON means to desert or forsake, to leave behind. However, the answer choices tell you that here, it is being used as a noun; that is, it refers to a complete surrender of inhibitions.
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “restraint.”
Choice (4) is exactly what you are looking for.
7. Choice (2)
PROBITY is not related to “probing”—it has to do with high moral character, rectitude, integrity, or honesty.
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “lacking honesty.”
Dishonesty is the only choice that works.
Disinterest is the quality of being free of bias. (Don’t confuse it with uninterested, which means “bored.”)
8. Choice (3)
LOGY means “lethargic” or “lacking in energy or vitality.” It usually refers to a combination of mental and physical slowness.
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “wakeful” and “fresh.”
Alert fits the bill here. Of the other choices, the only unfamiliar word is chagrined, which means “ashamed.”
If you had to guess, note that because there is only one difficult vocabulary word, chagrined, in the answer choices, it is unlikely to be right.
9. Choice (5)
To CEDE is to yield, give up, or transfer title to someone else—one country cedes land to another, for instance.
If you don’t give something up, you hang onto it, so a synonym for “keep” will be the correct answer.
Retain is the answer choice you are looking for.
There is no precise antonym for make sense of, so you could have eliminated this choice if you needed to guess.
10. Choice (4)
To PROSCRIBE is to forbid or to prohibit as harmful. (It shouldn’t be confused with prescribe, which means “to set down as a rule,” such as when you order someone to take medicine.)
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “allow.”
choice (4) fits well here.
You could easily establish that risk has no clear opposite, except, maybe, play it safe. All the answer choices here are single words. Therefore, risk is not the answer here.
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: Each question below consists of a capitalized word that is followed by five words or phrases. Choose the lettered word or phrase whose meaning is most nearly opposite to the meaning of the capitalized word. Because some questions require you to distinguish fine shades of meaning, it is advisable to consider all the choices before deciding on the best choice.
1. ESCHEW:
1 relax
2 restrain
3 indulge in
4 reunite
5 swallow whole
2. MENDICANT:
1 disembodied
2 deteriorated
3 self-sufficient
4 self-satisfied
5 nondenominational
3. CONVOKE:
1 pacify
2 disperse
3 arc
4 forswear
5 outfox
4. COLLAR:
1 misstate
2 untwist
3 free
4 abscond
5 deceive
5. IOTA:
1 molecule
2 plethora
3 dispatch
4 scrap
5 falsehood
6. AMBULATORY:
1 surefooted
2 fast moving
3 fixed
4 healthy
5 wheeled
7. PURBLIND:
1 obtuse
2 visible
3 negotiable
4 perceptive
5 analogical
8. PREVARICATION:
1 capacity
2 ostentation
3 function
4 donation
5 verity
9. LEVELING:
1 darkening
2 illuminating
3 expanding
4 canting
6 reviewing
10. LULL:
1 upset
2 dislike
3 fool
4 mull over
5 account for
1. Choice (3)
ESCHEW has nothing to do with either sneezing or chewing. To eschew something is to shun, abstain from, or avoid it.
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “embrace” or “indulge in.”
Choice (3) works perfectly. Be careful here: If you had misinterpreted the stem word to mean “chew,” you might have chosen swallow whole. But chew and swallow whole aren’t really opposites anyway.
If you had to guess, you could eliminate swallow whole; it has no clear opposite.
2. Choice (3)
To be MENDICANT is to depend on charity to live. (A MENDICANT is a beggar.)
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “not needing charity,” like “self-supporting.”
Self-sufficient is the only answer that comes close.
Eliminate self-satisfied as it has has no clear antonym.
3. Choice (2)
To CONVOKE is to assemble in a group. (You may have heard the term convoke a meeting, which means to call a meeting.)
The correct answer choice will be a word that means to separate.
Answer choice (2) works best here. Of the remaining words, to pacify is to calm down, arc means “to move in a curve,” to forswear is to renounce, and to outfox is to outthink or to fool.
If guessing proved to be necessary, note that arc and outfox have no good antonyms, and could be taken out of the running.
4. Choice (3)
Aside from what you might wear around your neck, to COLLAR is to grab or seize. (You may have heard the phrase police collared the criminal, meaning that they caught the criminal.)
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “let go.”
Choice (3) is the closest match. Choice (4), abscond, means “to leave quickly and secretly.”
5. Choice (2)
An IOTA is a tiny amount or a minuscule portion.
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “a lot.”
A molecule is a group of atoms, which is tiny. Eliminate.
A plethora is a great amount. This is the correct answer here.
A dispatch is a message. Eliminate.
A scrap is also small. Eliminate.
A falsehood is a lie. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could note that a molecule and a dispatch are physical things. As such, they have no antonyms, and must be incorrect.
6. Choice (3)
To be AMBULATORY is to be able to move. (To amble is to walk slowly.)
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “unable to move.”
Fixed means “immobile” or “stationary.” This is the correct answer.
Eliminate wheeled when guessing. It has no clear opposite. Also, all the other answer choices have to do with motion, so it is unlikely that healthy is the correct answer here.
7. Choice (4)
As you might guess from the word blind, to be PURBLIND is to be unable to see.
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “able to have sight.”
Obtuse means “stupid.” Eliminate.
To be visible is to be capable of being seen. Be careful—this is not the same as being able to see! Eliminate.
Negotiable means “open to compromise.” Eliminate.
Those who are perceptive are able to perceive, that is, able to discern things. This is the correct answer.
Analogical means “based on analogy.” Get rid of this choice.
It’s hard to think of any precise and specific antonym for analogical. For this reason, it could be removed from the list of possible answers if you had to guess.
8. Choice (5)
PREVARICATION is lying.
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “truthfulness.”
Capacity is a measure of how much something can hold. Eliminate.
Ostentation means “pretentious display” or “boasting.” Eliminate.
Function means “purpose.” Eliminate.
A donation is something given to a cause or charity. Eliminate.
Verity means “truthfulness.” This is the correct answer.
It’s hard to think of precise and specific antonyms for capacity, function, or donation. These choices can be disregarded.
9. Choice (4)
LEVELING is the act of making something level or flat.
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “to make uneven.”
Illuminating means “lighting up.” Eliminate.
Canting is setting something at an angle, that is, stopping it from being level. This is the correct answer.
There is no good antonym for reviewing. If you had to guess, you could eliminate this one.
10. Choice (1)
To LULL is to soothe. You may have thought of the word lullaby, a song that is meant to soothe a child to sleep.
The correct answer choice will be a word that means “to cause distress.”
Upset is the correct answer.
To “mull over” is to think carefully about something.
Since there is no good antonym for account for, it can be disregarded.
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: Each question below consists of a capitalized word that is followed by five words or phrases. Choose the lettered word or phrase whose meaning is most nearly opposite to the meaning of the capitalized word. Because some questions require you to distinguish fine shades of meaning, it is advisable to consider all the choices before deciding on the best choice.
1. LICENSE:
1 curb
2 tie
3 rule
4 impress
5 age
2. FEBRILE:
1 lacking fever
2 unable to climb
3 unable to grasp
4 sturdy
5 coarse
3. INSIDIOUS:
1 comparable
2 direct
3 external
4 moral
5 fearless
4. VIRTUOSO:
1 malefactor
2 gnome
3 incompetent
4 lackey
5 sinner
5. POLARIZE:
1 delay
2 welcome
3 cancel
4 insulate
5 unite
6. UNGUENT:
1 irritant
2 depressant
3 solvent
4 penitent
5 emolument
7. WHIMSICAL:
1 grave
2 dull
3 proud
4 thought-provoking
5 hardworking
8. DANDY:
1 rogue
2 fatalist
3 careless dresser
4 dull conversationalist
5 stern disciplinarian
9. MAR:
1 deaden
2 flatter
3 praise
4 soothe
5 enhance
10. STANCH:
1 cause to flow
2 allow to disintegrate
3 feel uncertain
4 attempt to conceal
5 provoke disrespect
1. Choice (1)
In this question, LICENSE is a verb. It must be, because choice (4), impress, can’t be a noun, so all the choices in this question must be verbs. As a verb, license means “to allow.”
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “prohibit.”
To curb is to restrain. Hold on to this one.
Tie means “to knot.” Eliminate.
Rule means “to make a decision or to command.” Eliminate.
To impress is to create a vivid imprint or image. Eliminate.
Age means “to get older.” Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate rule and impress because they have no clear opposites.
2. Choice (1)
Febrile means feverish.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “not feverish.”
Lacking fever looks good. Hold on to this one.
Unable to climb doesn’t have anything to do with fever. Eliminate.
Unable to grasp has nothing to do with fever. Eliminate.
Sturdy means “strong” or “robust.” Eliminate.
Coarse means “rough.” Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate unable to climb because it has no clear opposite.
3. Choice (2)
Insidious describes something that spreads harmfully in a subtle or stealthy manner.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “overt” or “direct.”
Comparable has nothing to do with directness. Eliminate.
Direct is exactly what we’re looking for. Hold on to this one.
External means “outward,” and while this is a tempting choice, something that’s insidious does not have to be internal. Eliminate.
Moral may be tempting, since someone that’s insidious is likely to be immoral. However, insidious can refer to things other than people (“insidious disease,” for instance). Eliminate.
Fearless has nothing to do with directness. Eliminate.
4. Choice (3)
A VIRTUOSO has great skill.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “one who lacks ability.”
Malefactor probably looks good if you mistake virtuoso for someone who’s virtuous. Eliminate.
A gnome is a mythical creature, or a small, wise person. Eliminate.
An incompetent describes one who can’t do something adequately. Hold onto this one.
Lackey means “servant.” Eliminate.
A sinner is one who does wrong. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate gnome, because it has no clear opposite.
5. Choice (5)
To polarize is to cause to concentrate around two conflicting positions. For instance, the Vietnam War polarized To the American people into two camps—those for the war and those protesting it.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “bring together.”
Delay means “to draw out” or “lengthen.” This one’s out.
To welcome is to greet. Eliminate.
Cancel means “to annul” or “invalidate.” Eliminate.
To insulate is to isolate or to prevent the passage of heat or cold through into or out of something. Eliminate.
Unite means “bring together as one.” Here’s our winner.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate cancel and welcome, which have no clear opposites.
6. Choice (1)
An UNGUENT is an ointment used to soothe or heal.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for something that irritates or aggravates.
Irritant looks good. Hold on to this one.
A depressant is something that depresses. Eliminate.
A solvent is something that dissolves another substance. Eliminate.
Penitent describes one who feels sorry for his or her misdeeds or sins. Eliminate.
Emolument means “compensation” or “payment for employment.” Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate emolument and solvent because they have no clear opposites.
7. Choice (1)
WHIMSICAL means “playful.”
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “not playful” or “serious.”
Grave means “very serious,” so it looks good. Hold on to this one.
Dull is boring or not sharp. Eliminate.
Proud has nothing to do with playfulness. Eliminate.
Thought-provoking may seem tempting, but something that’s playful can still be thought-provoking. Eliminate.
Hardworking is also tempting, but one’s sense of whimsy does not address one’s work ethic. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could avoid thought-provoking because it has no clear opposite.
8. Choice (3)
A DANDY is one who is very elegant in dress or manners.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “one who is not elegant in dress or manners.”
A rogue is a scoundrel or unprincipled person. This term doesn’t have anything to do with dress, so eliminate it. A fatalist is one who thinks things can’t be changed by human effort. Eliminate.
Careless dresser matches our prephrase pretty well. Keep this one.
Dull conversationalist has nothing to do with dress or manners. Eliminate.
Stern disciplinarian deals with one’s management style, not dress habits. Eliminate.
Avoid fatalist if you find that you have to guess, because it has no clear opposite.
9. Choice (5)
To MAR is to damage in a way that makes something less attractive or perfect.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “beautify.”
Deaden means “to make less energetic” or to “lessen.” Eliminate.
Flatter means “to compliment.” Eliminate.
Praise is a synonym of flatter, so it doesn’t work, either. Eliminate.
To soothe is to calm or to relieve the pain of something.
It has nothing to do with damage, so eliminate.
Enhance means “to increase the value or beauty” of something. It matches our prephrase, so we have a winner.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate flatter and praise because they’re synonyms.
10. Choice (1)
STANCH means “to stop the flow” of something.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “cause the flow of.”
Cause to flow is just what we’re looking for. Hold on to this one.
Allow to disintegrate has nothing to do with the flow of anything. Eliminate.
Feel uncertain would have an antonym—“feel certain.” Eliminate.
Attempt to conceal would be the opposite of “display openly,” which doesn’t work here. Eliminate.
Provoke disrespect has nothing to do with the flow of any fluid. Eliminate.
Allow to disintegrate has no clear opposite, and it can be disregarded.
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: Each question below consists of a capitalized word that is followed by five words or phrases. Choose the lettered word or phrase whose meaning is most nearly opposite to the meaning of the capitalized word. Because some questions require you to distinguish fine shades of meaning, it is advisable to consider all the choices before deciding on the best choice.
1. ABSTEMIOUS:
1 festive
2 boisterous
3 frigid
4 hedonistic
5 pure
2. ADMONISH:
1 reduce
2 commend
3 discourage
4 scan
5 obey
3. IMPASSE:
1 resolution
2 priority
3 victory
4 birthright
5 easement
4. QUIET:
1 militate
2 agitate
3 exalt
4 confront
5 elicit
5. FANTASTIC:
1 disappointing
2 certified
3 parochial
4 intangible
5 prosaic
6. COUNTENANCE:
1 denude
2 turn around
3 forbid
4 move away
5 imply
7. FAMILIAR:
1 frightening
2 motley
3 inhuman
4 alien
5 malformed
8. INSENSIBLE:
1 cognizant
2 pragmatic
3 pompous
4 patrician
5 judicial
9. WARRANT:
1 behave rashly
2 seep slowly
3 allow to escape
4 not justify
5 not worry
10. DILUTION:
1 obsequiousness
2 clarity
3 concentration
4 cloudlessness
5 alloy
1. Choice (4)
One who is ABSTEMIOUS abstains from certain pleasures.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for indulgent
Festive means “celebratory” or “joyful.” Eliminate.
Boisterous is rowdy, unrestrained. Eliminate.
Frigid is very cold. Eliminate.
Hedonistic means “indulgent in pleasure and enjoyment.” Keep this.
Pure doesn’t fit here. Eliminate.
2. Choice (2)
To ADMONISH is to reprove mildly or warn against something.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “approve of.”
Reduce means “to make smaller.” Eliminate.
To commend is to approve of one’s actions. It matches our prephrase, so keep this one.
Discourage is basically a synonym for admonish. Eliminate.
Scan is to look quickly over an area. Eliminate.
Obey doesn’t match our prephrase. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate discourage, because it’s a synonym of the stem word, and scan, because it has no good opposite.
3. Choice (1)
An IMPASSE is a deadlock.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “solution” or “agreement.”
Resolution looks good. Hold on to this one.
Priority has to do with precedence or urgency. Eliminate. Victory doesn’t work here. Eliminate.
Birthright has nothing to do with a solution. Eliminate.
Easement is something that provides comfort, which doesn’t match our prephrase. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate birthright and priority because they have no clear opposites.
4. Choice (2)
Notice that the answer choices are verbs, so the stem word must be a verb. To QUIET a situation is to calm it down.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “irritate” or “aggravate.”
Militate may sound good because going to battle sounds like the opposite of quieting a situation, but it actually means “to have influence.” Eliminate.
Agitate means “to stir up,” which works with our prephrase. Hold onto this one.
To exalt is to raise in status. It has nothing to do with calming or irritating a situation. Eliminate.
Confront may be tempting, since confrontation gives an impression of making a situation escalate. However, confrontation may lead to a solution, and thus a quieting, of the situation. Eliminate.
Elicit means “to draw out of,” such as in eliciting answers to question. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate elicit because it has no clear opposite.
5. Choice (5)
Something that’s FANTASTIC is out of the ordinary. Be careful here, because this word is commonly taken to mean “outstanding” or “wonderful.”
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “everyday” or “ordinary.”
Disappointing looks good if you use the “wonderful” definition of the stem word. However, even if you use this definition, there’s no reason to assume that something not fantastic was disappointing. If you don’t have any expectations going in, then you won’t feel disappointment coming out. Eliminate.
Certified has nothing to do with how everyday something is. Eliminate.
Parochial means “pertaining to a parish.” Eliminate. Intangible means “untouchable.” Eliminate.
Prosaic means “ordinary,” which matches our prephrase. It’s the winner.
6. Choice (3)
As a verb, COUNTENANCE means “to approve of” something.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “disapprove.”
Denude means “to expose,” which doesn’t match our prephrase. Eliminate.
Turn around doesn’t work here. Eliminate.
Forbid is a pretty good match of our prephrase. Hang on to this one.
Move away doesn’t match our prephrase. Eliminate.
Imply means “to hint at indirectly,” which doesn’t fit in with our expectations. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate Turn Around because it has no clear opposite.
7. Choice (4)
Something that’s FAMILIAR is well known.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “unknown” or “strange.”
Frightening may be tempting, since strange things are often frightening, but it doesn’t match our prephrase. Eliminate.
Motley means “diverse.” Eliminate.
Inhuman means “brutal.” Eliminate.
Alien is another word for foreign or strange. We’ve got a match, so keep this one.
Malformed means “imperfectly formed.” Eliminate.
8. Choice (1)
Insensible does not mean “senseless,” but rather “unaware” or “unable to feel.”
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “able to feel.”
Cognizant means “aware.” This is a perfect match with our prephrase, so keep it.
Pragmatic means “sensible” or “practical.” If you use the wrong definition of the stem word, you may pick this choice. However, it doesn’t match our prephrase, so eliminate it.
Pompous means “self-important.” Eliminate.
Patrician means “aristocratic.” Eliminate.
Judicial pertains to the court system. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate Judicial because it has no clear opposite.
9. Choice (4)
To WARRANT is to justify or merit some sort of treatment.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “not justify” or “not merit.”
Behave rashly does not match our prephrase. Eliminate. Seep slowly has nothing to do with merit or justification, so eliminate it.
Allow to escape has nothing to do with warrant, so eliminate.
Not justify matches our prephrase perfectly. This is probably our winner.
Not worry doesn’t work. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate Allow to escape because it has no clear opposite.
10. Choice (3)
Dilution means “weakening” or “making less concentrated.”
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “strengthening.”
Obsequiousness refers to excessive compliance. Eliminate.
Clarity has nothing to do with strength, so eliminate.
Concentration means “strengthening” or “making more concentrated.” Keep this one.
Cloudlessness doesn’t work. Eliminate.
Alloy is a mixture of different metals. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate Alloy because it has no clear opposite.
Time: 10 Questions/10 Minutes
Directions: Each question below consists of a capitalized word that is followed by five words or phrases. Choose the lettered word or phrase whose meaning is most nearly opposite to the meaning of the capitalized word. Because some questions require you to distinguish fine shades of meaning, it is advisable to consider all the choices before deciding on the best choice.
1. LARGESS:
1 emaciation
2 potability
3 poverty
4 economy
5 admiration
2. MERCURIAL:
1 dull
2 secular
3 nontoxic
4 stable
5 gaseous
3. DISPERSE:
1 account for
2 gather up
3 apply to
4 concentrate on
5 take apart
4. SEDULITY:
1 nonchalance
2 loyalty
3 hurriedness
4 willingness
5 majesty
5. INNATE:
1 exterior
2 acquired
3 false
4 gaudy
5 proud
6. VENERATE:
1 detest
2 disrespect
3 renew
4 uncover
5 deserve
7. GAUNT:
1 plump
2 lenient
3 secular
4 embellished
5 needy
8. CULPABILITY:
1 vulnerability
2 flexibility
3 irreproachability
4 covertness
5 ineptitude
9. OBLIVIOUS:
1 visible
2 subtle
3 active
4 intelligent
5 mindful
10. TRUNCATE:
1 wrap around
2 add on
3 darken
4 handle carelessly
5 retain
1. Choice (4)
LARGESS is generosity, or willingness to spend money in bunches.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “thriftiness.”
Emaciation is extreme thinness. Eliminate.
Potability means “drinkability.” Eliminate.
Poverty may be tempting, since it has to do with money, but lack of money is not the opposite of “willing to spend money.” Eliminate.
Economy means “thriftiness,” which matches our prephrase. Keep it.
Admiration means “respect.” Eliminate.
2. Choice (4)
In this question, MERCURIAL means “erratic” or “fickle.”
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “constant” or “steady.”
Dull means “blunt” or “boring.” Eliminate.
Secular is defined as not religious. Eliminate.
Nontoxic describes something that is not poisonous. This may be tempting, since mercury is a poisonous metal, but the stem word does not mean poisonous, so you have to eliminate this choice.
Stable matches our prephrase. Keep it.
Gaseous may be tempting because mercury is a liquid metal, but the stem word has nothing to do with states of matter. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate gaseous because it has no clear opposite.
3. Choice (2)
When you DISPERSE something, you scatter it.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “bring together.”
Account for doesn’t work. Eliminate.
Gather up matches our prephrase pretty closely. Keep this one.
Apply to doesn’t match our expectation, so eliminate this choice.
Concentrate on means “to focus attention on” something, which doesn’t work. Eliminate.
Take apart doesn’t work, either. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate account for because it has no clear opposite.
4. Choice (1)
SEDULITY is defined as blatant attentiveness or concentration.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “not attentive” or “lack of concern.”
Nonchalance refers to a lack of concern or a lack of attention. That matches our prephrase, so keep it.
Loyalty is a feeling of attachment or devotion. Eliminate. Hurriedness has nothing to do with attentiveness, so get rid of it.
Willingness has nothing to do with the stem, so eliminate it.
Majesty means “greatness” and “dignity.” Eliminate.
5. Choice (2)
Something that’s INNATE is something that you’re born with.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “learned.”
Exterior means “outer” or “outside.” Just because the stem word begins with IN and this choice starts with EX, which means “out” or “from,” you may be tempted here. Don’t be. Eliminate.
Acquired matches our prephrase. If you have to acquire something, it can’t be something you’re born with. Keep this choice.
False doesn’t have anything to do with the stem. Eliminate.
Gaudy describes something tasteless or showy. Eliminate.
Proud doesn’t match our prephrase. Eliminate.
6. Choice (2)
To VENERATE is to treat with respect.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “treat with disrespect.”
Detest means “hate.” While it may seem close to disrespect, detest deals with feelings, not actual treatment. You can detest someone without being disrespectful. Eliminate.
Disrespect matches our prephrase almost word for word. Keep it.
Renew doesn’t match our prephrase, so you have to eliminate this choice.
Uncover has nothing to do with respect or disrespect. Eliminate.
Deserve fails to match our expectation. Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate deserve because it has no clear opposite.
7. Choice (1)
GAUNT is thin or emaciated.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “thick.”
Plump works well, since it’s a close match to our prephrase. Keep it.
Lenient means “bending” or “yielding.” Eliminate.
Secular means “not religious.” Eliminate.
Embellished means “made beautiful.” Eliminate.
Needy doesn’t match our prephrase. Eliminate.
8. Choice (3)
CULPABILITY is responsibility for blame.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “not responsible for blame.”
Vulnerability is the state of being defenseless. Eliminate.
Flexibility is the ability to bend or stretch. Eliminate. Irreproachability refers to the quality of being free of reproach or criticism. This is the word we’re looking for in this question.
Covertness means “secrecy,” and has nothing to do with respect or disrespect. Eliminate.
Ineptitude fails to match our expectation. Eliminate.
9. Choice (5)
OBLIVIOUS means “unaware.”
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “aware.”
Visible means “able to be seen.” Eliminate.
Subtle is a good opposite for “obvious,” but the stem word is oblivious, and so this choice doesn’t fit. Eliminate.
Active has nothing to do with awareness. Eliminate.
Intelligent doesn’t match our prephrase. Eliminate.
Mindful means “aware” or “conscious of.” This matches our prephrase, so keep it.
10. Choice (2)
TRUNCATE means “to shorten,” usually by cutting something off.
The correct answer choice will be a synonym for “add more to something.”
Wrap around has nothing to do with adding on. Eliminate.
Add on matches our prephrase perfectly. Keep it.
Darken has nothing to do with adding or shortening something. Eliminate.
Handle carelessly doesn’t work with our prephrase. Eliminate.
Retain doesn’t work either, as its opposite would mean “give away,” not “shorten.” Eliminate.
If you needed to guess, you could eliminate wrap around because it has no clear opposite.
Chapter 5: GRE Reading Comprehension
Reading Comprehension is the only question type that appears on all major standardized tests, and the reason for this isn’t too surprising. No matter what academic area you pursue, you’ll have to make sense of some dense, unfamiliar material. The topics for GRE Reading Comp passages are taken from three areas: social sciences, natural sciences, and humanities. So in a way, Reading Comp is the most realistic of all the question types on the test. And right now is a good time to start shoring up your critical reading skills, both for the test and for future study in your field.
The directions for this question type look like this:
Directions: This passage in this test is accompanied by questions based on its content. After reading a selection, choose the best response to each question. Your replies are to be based on what is actually stated or implied in the passage.
On the GRE CAT you will see two to four Reading Comp passages, each with two to four questions. You will have to tackle the passage and questions as they are given to you.
To improve your Reading Comprehension skills, you’ll need a lot of practice—and patience. You may not see dramatic improvement after only one drill. But with ongoing practice, the basic principles below will help you to increase your skill and confidence on this section by the day of the test.
ZOOM IN!
As you read the first third of the passage, try to zoom in on the main idea of the passage, first by getting a sense of the general topic, and then by pinning down the scope of the passage. Finally, zero in on the author’s purpose in writing the passage.
Read Actively: Don’t Just “Read” the Passage
To do well on this section of the test, you’ll need to do more than just read the words on the page. You’ll need to read actively. Active reading involves keeping your mind working at all times, while trying to anticipate where the author’s points are leading. It means thinking about what you’re reading as you read it. It means paraphrasing complicated-sounding ideas and jargon. Here are some pointers on reading a GRE passage actively:
• Identify the topic.
• Narrow it down to the precise scope that the author includes.
• Make a hypothesis about why the author is writing and where he or she is going with it.
• As you’re reading, ask yourself: “Why did the author include this paragraph?” “What shift did the author have in mind when moving on to this paragraph?” “What bearing does this paragraph have on the author’s main idea?” “What’s the author’s main point here?” “What’s the purpose of this paragraph? Of this sentence?”
DON’T WASTE YOUR TIME!
You don’t have to memorize or understand every little thing as you read the passage. Remember, you can always refer back to the passage to clarify the meaning of any specific detail.
Read for Structure:
Your Goal Is Not to Memorize Every Detail!
In their efforts to understand what the author says, test takers often ignore the less glamorous but important structural side of the passage—namely, how the author says it. One of the keys to success with Reading Comprehension is to understand not only the passage’s purpose but also the structure of each passage. Why? Because the questions at the end of the passage ask both what the author says and how he or she says it. To ensure that you read for structure, remember to do the following:
ATTACK THE PASSAGE!
You can be an active reader by:
• Thinking about what you’re reading.
• Paraphrasing the complicated parts.
• Asking yourself questions about the passage.
• Jotting down notes.
• Always look for Keywords, the structural signals that authors use to indicate logical connections between sentences.
• Don’t try to memorize details! Skim them until the questions demand them.
• Look for topic sentences to help you to determine the function of each paragraph.
• Be alert for comparisons and contrasts between:
— Two thinkers or theories.
— Different points in time.
— The author’s view and other views.
— What’s known and what’s unknown.
• Remember, GRE Reading Comp passages usually do one of the following:
Argue a position
Discuss a specific subject
Explain new findings or research
Recognize the Most Common Question Types
GRE Reading Comprehension questions are predictable. The test writers put the same types of questions on the test year after year. Practicing identifying and answering the following question types will help you get ready for them on test day:
Global: Ask you to identify the central idea or primary purpose of the passage.
Explicit Detail/Text: Ask you to find what is true “according to the passage” or what the passage states.
Inference: Ask you to determine what the passage suggests, what it implies, what conclusion it supports, or a statement the author would be most likely to agree with.
Logic: Ask you why the author includes a particular example sentence or phrase, or ask you to determine the function of a paragraph.
Vocabulary-in-Context: Ask you to define a word or phrase as it is used in the passage.
WHERE DO THE PASSAGES COME FROM?
Topics for Reading Comp passages come from:
• The social sciences
• The natural sciences
• The humanities
Watch Out for Wrong Answer Types
Because the GRE Reading Comprehension question types are predictable, wrong answer types to these questions are also predictable. If you get stumped on any GRE Reading Comp question, you should rule out as many wrong answer choices as you can and then pick from the remaining choices. Typical wrong answers to look for on GRE Reading Comp are:
Au Contraire: Sounds very similar to the correct answer but directly contradicts the passage.
Outside the Scope: Raises a topic that’s never mentioned in the passage.
Distortion: Distorts or twists the facts or the main idea; sounds superficially plausible because it incorporates words or phrases from the passage, but actually confuses the author’s intended meaning.
Faulty Use of Detail: Mentions true points not relevant to the question (often from the wrong paragraph).
Extreme: Sounds too positive or too negative; uses exaggerated-sounding language, such as only, never, or always.
Half-Right, Half-Wrong: Present some information that is correct and some that is incorrect.
MORE STRATEGIES FOR SENTENCE COMPLETION QUESTIONS
Global: In general, any answer choice that zeroes in on the content of only one sentence or paragraph will be wrong. Often, scanning the verbs in the global answer choices is a good way to take a first cut at the question. Common wrong answer choices associated with this question type are those that are too broad or narrow in scope, as well as those that are inconsistent with the author’s tone. The beginning of a passage is often a good place to start when looking for the correct answer choice.
Explicit Detail/Text: Explicit Detail/Text questions are usually related to the passage’s main idea (the author’s purpose in writing the passage), and correct choices tend to be related to major points. In addition, the question and the correct answer choice can repeat a word or phrase from the passage. When you match a key word in the question with one in the passage, go right to that spot and reread the sentence.
Inference: Don’t expect to find the answer to an Inference question quoted in the passage. Instead, go through the answer choices and ask yourself if you could come to that conclusion based on what you just read. The right answer to an Inference question, if denied, will contradict or significantly weaken the passage.
Logic: As you look at the answer choices, keep in mind the author’s main idea. What role does the paragraph play with regard to that idea and the evidence to support or refute it? Predict the answer in your head, then review the remaining answer choices.
Vocabulary-in-Context: If you don’t know the meaning of the word outright, its context can give you a clue here, just as the context helps in Sentence Completion questions. Look to a sentence’s charge, keywords, and structural road signs. (In addition, you can quickly brush up on your vocabulary by reviewing the word groups, root lists, and top GRE words in the back of this book.)
Drill
The correct answers to GRE Reading Comp questions must be irrefutable. For this reason, answer choices that are extreme or too emotional tend to be wrong. Decide whether each of the following sentences sounds Extreme or Moderate:
1. Reporters tend to focus on news stories that they believe will improve ratings.
Extreme / Moderate
2. It is impossible that one person could have authored all of the plays we currently consider to have been written by Shakespeare.
Extreme / Moderate
3. Scientists who refrain from making bold statements to their peers about the significance of their experiments often employ far less technical language in news releases.
Extreme / Moderate
4. The melting of Antarctic ice sheets is one of several potential threats to the stability of the Earth’s climate.
Extreme / Moderate
5. Though Copernicus is generally associated with the discovery of the sun-centered universe, Aristarchus may have conceived of the idea in 200 B.C.
Extreme / Moderate
Now, read the following GRE-like sentence:
Marathon running has become increasingly popular as people have become more and more concerned about their health.
Remember that on GRE Reading Comp, some answer choices will sound like they fit the passage, but will actually distort the author’s point. Decide which of the three statements below agrees with the GRE-like sentence above:
1. Marathon running has become an international event that promotes friendship between cultures.
2. The fact that more people are running in marathons highlights the public’s increasing interest in pursuing healthy activities.
3. The majority of people who take up marathon running do so because they are concerned about their health.
THE KAPLAN FOUR-STEP METHOD FOR READING COMPREHENSION
Now that you have the basics for tackling Reading Comprehension questions, you’re ready to learn Kaplan’s strategic approach to Reading Comp on the GRE CAT. As is the case with all other GRE question types, approaching Reading Comp in a systematic manner is the best way to avoid common pitfalls and improve your score.
Read the first third
Identify topic and scope, zero in on the purpose of the passage, and predict where the passage will go.
Topic: The broad concept or idea addressed in the passage
Scope: The more narrow and specific area of the topic that is being discussed
Purpose: A hypothesis about why the author is writing and where he or she is going with the passage
Here’s a hypothetical example. Suppose you encounter a reading passage about the Battle of Gettysburg on the GRE. The broad topic of “The Battle of Gettysburg, ” for example, would be a lot to cover in a Reading Comp passage. So if you encountered such a passage, you would also need to ask yourself, “What is the scope of this author’s passage?” or, in this case, “What specific aspect of the battle does the author address?” Whatever that chunk is—the prebattle scouting, how the battle was fought—is the passage’s scope. Finally, you should also consider why the author is writing. For example, is the author writing to refute an established point of view (a common format on the GRE), or to contrast two interpretations of why the battle occurred? Being able to answer this question will tell you how the passage is organized.
Read the remaining two thirds.
Create a brief “road map”—jot down some brief notes—as you read.
Review your “road map.”
Confirm topic, scope and purpose.
Attack the questions.
• Use the stem to plan your attack!
• Reread any relevant text.
• Predict an answer.
• Choose an answer.
Now that you’ve got the fundamentals of GRE Reading Comp under your belt and you’ve had some practice in identifying Reading Comp wrong answer types, let’s put your knowledge to use on the following testlike passage and questions.
Tsunamis are huge, fast-moving waves that are capable of causing enormous destruction and loss of life if they broach the shoreline on a populated coast. To communities that have been devastated by such an event, the tsunami often seems to come out of nowhere, and survivors are mystified as to why such a huge wave could appear with so little warning. The terrifying suddenness of a tsunami’s arrival is a consequence of where and how they are created.
When submarine tectonic activity distorts the sea floor, it vertically displaces the overlying sea water. As the displaced water seeks equilibrium under the influence of gravity, waves form, and when the distortion is of sufficient magnitude, a tsunami can result. If the earthquake occurs near the shore, the tsunami may take only minutes to reach a populated coast.
Tsunamis attain their enormous heights through a process of decreasing speed and increasing height. The energy flux of a tsunami is constant, which leads to an inversely proportional relationship between the wave’s speed and its height. Since speed is directly proportional to water depth, as the wave approaches shallower water, its speed decreases, causing its height to increase to compensate for the loss and thus maintain the wave’s energy flux. Through this process, a barely perceptible deep ocean wave formed by an earthquake far from shore can rapidly transform into a tsunami that can exceed 30 meters at its final runup height, which it attains onshore above sea level.
1. The author is primarily concerned with
1 establishing that tsunamis are formed by submarine tectonic activity.
2 explaining why tsunamis can appear so suddenly and with so little warning.
3 arguing that a tsunami’s energy flux results in its great height and destructive capacity.
4 demonstrating that devastating tsunamis must be formed by earthquakes close to shore.
5 challenging long-held beliefs about the formation of deep ocean waves.
2. It may be inferred from the passage that a tsunami that entered deeper water would experience an increase in
1 destructive power
2 speed
3 energy flux
4 visibility
5 height
Think about how you attacked these Reading Comprehension questions. To maximize your score, it’s important to start practicing the techniques we’ve covered in this chapter now. On the pages that follow, you’ll find sets of GRE Reading Comp passages and practice questions that will help you to hone your skills with this question type. Try these practice sets under testlike conditions, moving from one question to the next at a rapid pace. Complete, strategic explanations to all of these questions follow so that you can check your answers and learn the most efficient means for completing each question correctly.
Drill
1. Moderate
2. Extreme
3. Moderate
4. Moderate
5. Moderate
Distortion Exercise
1. Distortion
2. Inference
3. Distortion
Practice Set
1. (2)
2. (2)
Time: 10 Questions/12 Minutes
Directions: Each passage in this test is followed by questions based on its content. After reading a selection, choose the best response to each question. Your replies are to be based on what is actually stated or implied in the passage.
While many different influences determine local air movements, the large-scale motion of winds over the earth’s surface depends on two factors. The first is differential heating. Equatorial air absorbs more solar energy than air at higher latitudes. Thus it rises, and cool air from higher latitudes flows under it, while the equatorial air flows toward the poles. Eventually it cools and sinks, continuing as surface wind. Hence, surface winds move toward the equator at low latitudes and toward the poles at higher latitudes.
Global wind motions are also affected by the Coriolis effect, which influences objects moving within a rotating system such as the earth. Objects on the earth’s surface move eastward at the same speed as the earth’s rotation—about 1,000 miles per hour at the equator, basically zero at the poles. An air mass that has moved north or south from the equator retains this inertial velocity, but the earth it passes over is moving more slowly. Hence, the air is deflected to the east. Winds from the poles toward the equator, on the other hand, have a low velocity compared to the areas they pass over; they are deflected toward the west.
1. The author is primarily concerned with
1 summarizing evidence
2 explaining phenomena
3 outlining opposing views
4 offering hypotheses
5 recording scientific observations
2. According to the passage, winds near the equator usually do which of the following?
I. Absorb solar energy at an unvarying rate
II. Flow toward the equator near the earth’s Surface and away from it at higher altitudes
III. Rush toward the east faster than the earth’s rotation
1 I only
2 II only
3 I and II only
4 II and III only
5 I, II, and III
3. The passage suggests that if the Coriolis effect did not exist, high-altitude wind near the equator would do which of the following?
1 It would not appear to move, because it would flow east at the same speed as the earth.
2 It would flow west faster than the earth’s rotation.
3 It would flow directly north or south from the equator.
4 It would remain stationary and mix with the warmer air from higher latitudes.
5 It would be deflected more toward the east than air near the poles.
4. The author would describe global air movements, in comparison with local winds, as
1 less regular
2 less well understood
3 less interesting
4 more predictable
5 basically similar
The two essays in which Virginia Woolf pursues women’s role in art and politics have traditionally been seen as a problematical adjunct to her novels. While A Room of One’s Own, with its acerbic wit, has been given grudging respect, the outspokenly programmatic Three Guineas has been dismissed as a pacifist-feminist tract. No doubt these essays lack the subtlety and superb control of the novels, but to a recent generation of critics they remain significant because of their anticipation of many of the concerns of contemporary feminism.
A Room of One’s Own (1929) is written in the form of a lecture “delivered” at a fictitious women’s college. Woolf begins by contrasting the paltry luncheon given at the college with the luxurious fare offered at a nearby men’s university. The difference symbolizes more profound disparities that—Woolf now comes to her main point—bear directly on the fortunes of women artists. For the woman author, financial independence, opportunities for education, tranquillity, and privacy are necessary preconditions, without which women are unlikely to produce works of genius. Great art can never be expected from “labouring, servile, or uneducated people.” (Among modern feminists, Tillie Olsen makes a similar point in Silences, though without Woolf’s undertone of class condescension.) When a woman obtains a room of her own, in all its senses, she may, according to Woolf, develop what Coleridge termed “the androgynous mind,” one which, having united its “male” and “female” sides, “transcends and comprehends the feelings of both sexes.”
In Three Guineas (1938), Woolf’s central argument, again foreshadowing a key contention of later feminism, is that the process of changing gender restrictions in the public world and in the private individual are interdependent. Such issues as childrearing (which she felt should be a shared responsibility) and professional equality between the sexes are not separate considerations, but rather different aspects of the same problem. Woolf also attempts to define women’s responsibilities in the larger political world. Discussing the probability of another world war, she argues that women with jobs in manufacturing should refuse to produce arms for use in a male-instigated debacle. Both at the time and since, many readers have found this argument naive. One working-class reader, Agnes Smith, wrote Woolf that the book was decidedly class bound; working women could hardly afford to jeopardize their employment for a pacifist idea. Current feminist critics accept the validity of Smith’s point—indeed, they acknowledge that it exposes a limitation of Woolf’s feminism generally—but they also note that the mild derision that greeted Three Guineas from the male establishment was typical of the reception often given a woman thinker’s ideas.
5. As used by Woolf, the phrase “a room of one’s own” apparently refers to all of the following EXCEPT
1 freedom from economic insecurity
2 separation of the “male” and “female” sides of consciousness
3 educational opportunities for women equal to those available to men
4 personal autonomy
5 the ability to work without distractions
6. Judging from the second paragraph, which of the following assumptions did Woolf make in the discussion of women writers?
1 The mind can be characterized as having masculine and feminine aspects.
2 All great authors have come from economically privileged backgrounds.
3 There have been no truly great women writers in the past.
4 Artistic development is independent of formal education.
5 Investigation of feelings and emotions is the most important goal of literature.
7. The passage provides information to answer which of the following questions?
1 Why did Woolf write A Room of One’s Own as a lecture when in fact it was not?
2 Why did Woolf’s tone shift in Three Guineas as compared to A Room of One’s Own?
3 How did Woolf struggle against male prejudice in her writing career?
4 What conditions foster the development of the “androgynous mind”?
5 What were readers’ responses to the ideas in A Room of One’s Own?
8. The author would state that, in comparison to her novels, Woolf’s essays on feminist themes could be regarded as more
1 original
2 familiar to the public
3 accepted by critics
4 artistically disciplined
5 blunt and direct
9. It can inferred from the passage that A Room of One’s Own and Three Guineas are similar in which of the following respects?
I. Both discuss social issues in terms of artistic development.
II. Neither presents specific ways in which women can fight a male-dominated society.
III. Both deal implicitly with the concerns of economically advantaged women.
1 I only
2 III only
3 I and II only
4 II and III only
5 I, II, and III
10. Which of the following provides the most appropriate title for the passage?
1 Virginia Woolf: Pacifist Pioneer
2 The Genesis of Virginia Woolf’s Feminism
3 A Precursor of Modern Feminism
4 Virginia Woolf’s Marriage of Art and Politics: A Critical Evaluation
5 The Myth of Virginia Woolf’s Feminism
Global Winds Passage
Topic and Scope: Wind; specifically, why winds move the way they do on a large scale.
Purpose and Main Idea: The author wants to explain the mechanisms that control large-scale wind motion.
Paragraph Structure: Paragraph 1 hinges on the key word while, which indicates that there is going to be a contrast: Local air movements are complicated, and large-scale movements depend on only two factors. He then describes the first factor, differential heating. Paragraph 2 describes the second factor, the Coriolis effect.
1. Choice (2)
This is a “global” question. Choice (2) fits our outline best; the author is describing and explaining observable phenomena. Choice (1) would require some statement that the facts the author mentions are proof or support for some theory. Only one view is presented (choice (3)), and it is presented, implicitly, as the accepted scientific consensus, not as a hypothesis (choice (4)). Choice (5) is incorrect; no observations are recorded, and the subject is talked about without much reference to actual readings.
2. Choice (2)
Here we have a straight, “Explicit Detail” question. Go to the points in the passage at which the behavior of winds near the equator is described (namely, at the end of each paragraph).
Statement II is easy to verify; it rephrases material in the fourth and sixth sentences of paragraph 1. Statements I and III are easy to rule out because they contain exaggerated or absurd ideas. Watch for these—the GRE will often make a potentially tricky choice clearly wrong by using one plainly foolish word. In statement I, the word is unvarying—why would the rate be unvarying? It should at least vary between night and day, and perhaps at different times of the year; in any case, the idea of “unvarying” never appears in the passage. In III, “rush” should stand out; whatever the winds do, it isn’t this.
3. Choice (3)
Here’s a difficult inference question, because the Coriolis effect itself is hard to understand if you’re not familiar with it. Reread the passage that describes the Coriolis effect, that is, the second paragraph.
In paragraph 2, we’re told that the Coriolis effect deflects the winds. So, if there were no Coriolis effect, they would simply rise and flow away from the equator—either north or south, since the equator has two sides (choice (3)).
The other answer choices can be eliminated. Choice (1) is tricky; the wind’s speed would match that of the earth, initially, but it leaves out differential heating, which causes the wind to move away from the equator. Choices (2) and (4) are clearly contrary to the passage: Winds flowing away from the equator are deflected east, not west, and the wind would not remain stationary, because of differential heating. Choice (5) is again a little confusing, but nothing in the passage supports it; if you think about it, the air’s eastward motion would diverge least from the earth’s at the equator, so this choice is false.
4. Choice (4)
This is an inference question. The first sentence specifies that “many” influences determine local winds, while only two determine global air movements. Logically, the interaction of “many” factors would be harder to predict.
Choice (1) is wrong—the drift of the whole passage is that global air movements are highly regular.
Choice (2) is beyond the scope of the passage; global winds seem to be quite well understood, and we have no basis for a comparison with local winds on this point.
Choice (3) would depend on what one is interested in, wouldn’t it? There is no basis for this choice.
Choice (5) is false: We’re not told about local air movements, but the first sentence (and common sense) suggests that they’re quite different from the big, regular movements of the global winds.
Virginia Woolf Passage
Topic and Scope: The first paragraph gives you these. The topic is Virginia Woolf, more specifically two of her essays that deal with feminist issues.
Purpose and Main Idea: The author is evaluating these essays, giving a synopsis of the ideas contained in each and the critical reaction to these ideas.
Paragraph Structure: Paragraph 1 introduces the essays. There is a key word here: because. This is going to tell you why the works were significant. Paragraph 2 describes A Room of One’s Own, and its arguments. Paragraph 3 describes Three Guineas, and also provides some criticism of this work.
5. Choice (2)
For this detail question, go to paragraph 2, in which the preconditions needed for women to produce works of genius, which are then figuratively summed up as “a room of [one’s] own, in all its senses,” are described. These preconditions provide our wrong answers. Choices (1) and (3) are virtual paraphrases of “financial independence” and “opportunities for education,” respectively. If a writer is no longer “labouring and servile,” she is then relatively autonomous (choice (4)). Choice (5) refers to the need for “tranquility and privacy.” That leaves choice (2), the correct choice. It is something to be overcome after one obtains a “room of one’s own.”
6. Choice (1)
This is an inference question. According to paragraph 2, one goal of a woman writer is to develop an “androgynous mind,” one that has united “male” and “female” characteristics. Thus Woolf’s assumption is that there is a division of mental processes according to gender, one that is “transcended” by genius. The assumption in choice (1) is required for Woolf’s discussion to make sense.
Choice (2) makes an all-inclusive generalization that distorts Woolf’s emphasis on financial security; it implies that no great artists have come from lower-class backgrounds—a distortion of the idea that women writers must gain financial security.
Choice (3) is beyond the scope of the passage. That Woolf would think there has never been a great woman writer is implausible; paragraph (2) merely says that without financial independence, women are unlikely (not unable) to produce great art.
Choice (4) is contrary to Woolf’s argument; she is saying that education is needed for women to become great writers.
Choice (5) mistakes one goal of the “androgynous” mind (comprehending the feelings of both sexes) for the main goal of all literature.
7. Choice (4)
A detail question is being asked here. The conditions for the development mentioned in choice (4) are discussed in paragraph 3. If a woman author obtains a room of her own in all its meanings (education, financial independence, etc.), she may then go on to develop an “androgynous” mind.
Choice (1) goes too far, since no information is given on why Woolf used the “lecture” format in A Room of One’s Own.
Choice (2) is also unmentioned; although a tone shift between A Room of One’s Own and Three Guineas is implied by the terms used to describe them (paragraph 1), the cause of the change is not specified.
Choice (3) is out since the passage gives only one example of apparent male prejudice against Woolf—the response to Three Guineas—and we don’t learn what Woolf’s reaction to this was.
Choice (5) is tricky. We are told how the public reacted to Three Guineas, but not to A Room of One’s Own.
8. Choice (5)
This is another detail question. The novels are mentioned only in the first paragraph, where the author concedes that the essays “no doubt . . . lack the subtlety” of the novels. The essays, then are “unsubtle,” and this idea is expressed in choice (5).
9. Choice (2)
Question (9) is a lengthy inference question that requires you to skip between the last two paragraphs.
Taking the statements one at a time, you can see Statement I is not true; only A Room of One’s Own discusses artistic development. Statement II is also incorrect; specific ways of fighting against male domination are brought up only in Three Guineas (pacifist action against a “male-instigated” war). Statement III is correct. As paragraph 2 makes clear, A Room of One’s Own discusses the achievement of financial independence by women who already possess some education and freedom from poverty; the fictitious setting of the college underlines this point. Three Guineas, as demonstrated by the criticism of Agnes Smith, was “class-bound”—relevant mainly to non-working-class women. The author refers to this as a “limitation of Woolf’s feminism generally,” further strengthening III.
10. Choice (3)
This is a special type of global question. A “best title” question asks you to identify the main theme of the passage, which is what a good title will focus on. Here, the last sentence of paragraph 1 states the theme: The essays are valuable because of their “anticipation . . . of contemporary feminism.” This idea is directly paraphrased in correct choice (3). Don’t worry that this choice doesn’t mention Woolf; it focuses squarely on what the author says about Woolf. The remainder of the passage surveys two aspects of Woolf’s feminism, both of which foreshadow present-day feminism, as paragraph 3 states directly and as the reference to Tillie Olsen in paragraph 2 suggests.
Choice (1) focuses on supporting detail—pacifism—a relatively minor issue in the passage.
Choice (2) is outside the scope of this passage. The genesis of Woolf’s ideas (in other words, how they originated) is not discussed.
Choice (4) is half right, half wrong. Although Virginia Woolf’s politics are evaluated, her novels, that is her art, are not discussed.
Choice (5) is too critical. Woolf’s feminism is taken seriously and is not criticized as a myth.
Time: 10 Questions/12 Minutes
Directions: Each passage in this test is followed by questions based on its content. After reading a selection, choose the best response to each question. Your replies are to be based on what is actually stated or implied in the passage.
Satire attained a dominating position between 1660 and 1730 that it had not had before. As an oblique expression of the writer’s wish to reform society, or as the somewhat baser tool of his scorn and ridicule, Restoration satire had diverse outlets. Political parties, religious sects, and fashionable philosophies were as much the delights of satirists as were topical gossip and assorted fops, pedants, and bigots.
Pope’s mock heroic epic, The Rape of the Lock, probes the excesses of romantic etiquette: Lady Belinda’s tresses are cropped by a suitor while she lingers over her coffee. According to Samuel Johnson, such an incident was a questionable topic for poetic treatment: “The subject of the poem is an event below the common incidents of common life.” Yet the frivolous subject matter provides the ideal setting for a gentle lambasting of traditional epic machinery and a delicate exposure of the romantic conventions of the day.
1. The passage supports which of the following statements concerning satire?
I. Satirists may focus both on the foibles of individuals and on larger, societal ills.
II. Satire could be used to mock poetic conventions.
III. Satire often served as a formidable weapon for personal revilement.
1 I only
2 III only
3 I and III only
4 II and III only
5 I, II, and III
2. According to the description in the passage, which of the following would be a satiric work?
1 A polemic decrying Calvinism
2 A vigorous denial of Lockean ethics
3 An exposé of patronage at the court of Charles II
4 A fanciful description of a mythical land
5 A cleverly disguised attack on an academic
3. The author would most likely argue that Johnson’s criticism of The Rape of the Lock shows
1 a narrow conception of the appropriate content of poetry
2 an obsession with minor stylistic flaws at the expense of an appreciation of the work as a whole
3 a failure to realize that the work is intentionally humorous
4 a belief that the work mocks the dignity of everyday life
5 an outdated code of values
4. The passage implies which of the following about the period before 1660?
1 Satire dealt only with subjects of political and religious importance.
2 Readers objected to satirists’ mocking of conventional values.
3 The conventions of heroic poetry were considered above criticism.
4 Satire was seen as only one among several important literary genres.
5 Because there was greater political freedom, writers could express political ideas directly rather than through satire.
Before the recent encroachments of tourism and commercialization, the culture of the Gullah communities on the Sea Islands off the southeast coast of the United States retained a unique identity derived partially from the Islands’ history as an area reserved for freed slaves after the Civil War. As an almost exclusively black community, the Gullah preserved African traditions concerning family structure and religious practices. At the same time, as a community of ex-slaves, the residents retained several facets of the Southern life they had left behind. This mixture provided a heritage that until recently was strong enough to sustain a vital culture.
As Patricia Jones-Jackson has pointed out, the basic unit of social life on the Sea Islands, as in West Africa, is the extended family. Since many islands are sectioned off into family communities, kinship ties are important to one’s acceptance into the social structure. Membership in the extended family also affects property rights. In the traditional Gullah system, family members do not normally buy land from one another, but acquire it by an unwritten contract known as “heir’s land.” Rules pertaining to marriage seem to be at least as broad in scope. Common-law marriages are considered as legitimate as marriages recorded by contract under law. Indeed, the infrequent occurrence of divorce and separation within the Sea Island communities demonstrates the strong cohesion of Gullah marital and familial institutions.
Unlike the laws and customs relating to family structure, the religious practices of the Sea Islanders, on the surface at least, bespeak a U.S. heritage. Depending on the village, a Baptist or Methodist church acts as an essential social institution. Yet, in contrast to the dualistic body-soul approach to the individual found in Christian teaching, the Gullah believe that a person has an earthly body, a soul that returns upon death to the Divine Kingdom, and a separate spiritual entity that can remain on Earth and influence the lives of those still living. This belief in a “body spirit” is prevalent among West African peoples, according to Jones-Jackson. She also notes the African influences on the interaction between the minister and the congregation: The prayers and sermons “embody a classical, Ciceronian rhetorical style and employ sophistic ornaments capable of divinely inspiring and passionately persuading a congregation to respond with raucous and joyous replies.”
5. Which of the following provides the most appropriate title for the passage?
1 Religious Beliefs of the Sea Islanders
2 “Heir’s Land”—Key to the Gullah Culture
3 African and U.S. Influences on Gullah Life
4 Family Structure and Property Rights and the Gullah
5 How Commercialization Has Brought Change to the Sea Islands
6. According to the passage, all of the following aspects of the culture of the Sea Islanders show the influence of African traditions EXCEPT the
1 family structure
2 conception of the afterlife
3 method of acquiring land
4 style used in prayers and sermons
5 importance of the churches as social institutions
7. It can be inferred that the institution of “heir’s land” allows the transfer of property under the terms of
1 a formal grant by the government
2 a marriage settlement between families
3 an oral agreement among family members
4 a written deed of ownership
5 an alteration of communal rights
8. On the basis of information supplied by the passage, which of the following would most likely resemble a social experience of a Sea Islander?
1 Dividing property in a divorce settlement under court supervision
2 Being required to sell one’s home because it lies in the path of a new highway
3 Growing up in a communal household composed of unrelated adults
4 Learning how to play a traditional song on a centuries-old instrument
5 Being given employment by a relative on the basis of one’s standing in the family
9. The author’s attitude towards the Gullah can best be described as
1 sympathetic and receptive
2 ambivalent and uncertain
3 detached and quizzical
4 morally outraged
5 quietly scornful
10. According to the passage, Patricia Jones-Jackson believes which of the following reveals an African influence on Gullah religious services?
1 The role of music in Gullah services
2 The number of Gullah sermons on African topics
3 The infrequency of divorce among Gullah families
4 The type of vocal participation by the Gullah congregation
5 The Gullah belief in the African origins of their institutions
Restoration Satire Passage
Topic and Scope: Satire between 1660 and 1730, particularly Pope’s The Rape of the Lock.
Purpose and Main Idea: Satire achieved a dominating position basically because it provided a new means of lambasting society.
Paragraph Structure: Paragraph 1 is an introduction to Restoration satire and what it allowed writers to do. Paragraph 2 is a criticism of The Rape of the Lock and a defense of the poem. The key word yet indicates that a rebuttal to Johnson’s criticism is coming up.
1. Choice (5)
Because this is a detail question, take the statements one at a time.
Statement I summarizes the diverse targets of satire, as detailed in the second and third sentences of paragraph 1.
Statement II is supported by the example of The Rape of the Lock, in paragraph 2.
Statement III goes back to paragraph 1. Satire was used as a tool for scorn and ridicule, and “fops, pedants, and bigots” were among its targets.
2. Choice (5)
Here we find an application question. The correct answer will fit into the definition of satire given in the passage. The description referred to in the question stem has two main points: Satire is both an “oblique”—or indirect—way of suggesting the need for social change, and a “baser” method of personal attack and vilification. Choice (5) satisfies the latter part of this definition, as its target is a person. It also brings in the notion of using an indirect method, although this does not seem to be requisite in a work satirizing a person. The last sentence of paragraph 1 also supports this choice; a list of “pedants” (scholars or teachers) might well have included an academic. All the other choices fail to make the proper distinctions. Choices (1), (2), and (3) emphasize the idea of social reform, without the equally important qualification of making their points indirectly. They are earnest, direct approaches and hence not satirical. Choice (5) is a genre that could be used for satire, but is not necessarily satirical in nature.
3. Choice (1)
You need to infer what the author believes about Johnson’s criticism, so reread the author’s rebuttal to it in the final paragraph. Johnson’s statement criticizes the subject matter of Pope’s mock epic: He thinks it too “common.” The sentence following the quote introduces the author’s disagreement with this assessment (with yet). The author claims that Pope used both the triviality of his subject and his mock serious treatment of it to make a social comment on the “excesses of romantic etiquette.” The implication is that Johnson ignored the uses Pope made of his subject matter in poetry. Alternatively, one can write poetry about common life. Either way, choice (1) correctly makes the point that Johnson presupposes a narrow definition of the medium.
Choice (2) is untrue, as the author does not admit any stylistic flaw in the poem, calling heroic couplets a “perfect vehicle” for Pope’s purposes.
Choices (3) and (5) are beyond the scope of the passage. Nowhere does the author suggest that Johnson misunderstood Pope’s intention, or suggest that Johnson’s views were particularly old-fashioned.
Choice (4) distorts Johnson’s meaning. If anything, his criticism reveals a contempt for ordinary life, not an idea of its “dignity.”
4. Choice (4)
This is another inference question. If, as the first sentence says, satire had a “dominating position between 1660 and 1730 that it had not had before,” then before 1660 it did not have a dominant position; choice (4) states this idea in different words.
The other choices pick up on details about post-1660 satire scattered throughout the passage—its use of topical and personal as well as political and religious topics (choice (1)), Pope’s satire of romantic conventions and the conventions of epic or heroic poetry (choices (2) and (3)), and satire as an oblique weapon of reform (choice (5)). But the passage gives us no basis for a pre- versus post-1660 comparison on any of these points. Choice (5) is worth noting as a slightly cumbersome, plausible-sounding statement that has no basis at all; the GRE uses this type of answer choice often. The opening generalization in choice (5) is questionable, and it’s never suggested that writers used satire for political expression because more open expression was forbidden.
Gullah Society Passage
Topic and Scope: The society of the Gullah, especially their customs.
Purpose and Main Idea: The author wishes to show that the Gullah heritage is a mixture of African and U. S. cultures.
Paragraph Structure: Paragraph 1 is an introduction to the Gullah and why their identity is unique. Paragraph 2 covers aspects of Gullah culture that are obviously of African origin. Paragraph 3 describes how religious customs of the Gullah seem to be of U.S. origin, but actually also reveal their African heritage. The key word is yet.
5. Choice (3)
This is a global question, so look to your scope and purpose. The second and third sentences of paragraph 1 indicate that the unique identity of the Gullah cult is attributable to the combined influences of African and U.S. elements. Paragraphs 2 and 3 go on to consider both African and U.S. aspects of beliefs and practices.
Choice (1) focuses on a detail, a topic discussed only in paragraph 3.
Choice (2) is beyond the scope of the passage. The author never claims that “heir’s land” is the key to Gullah culture.
Choice (4) hits on another detail.
Choice (5) raises a subject alluded to in the passage, but never discussed specifically.
6. Choice (5)
For this detail question, go through each answer choice one at a time, looking for the place in the passage that supports the relevant detail.
Paragraph 3 is built on a contrast between elements of Gullah religion that “bespeak a U.S. heritage” and those that are African in origin. Immediately following the statement that Gullah religious practices at least superficially reflect a U.S. heritage, the author cites the role of Baptist and Methodist churches as “essential social institutions.” Inferably, then, the social role of the churches is an American, not an African, element of the culture.
All the other choices are African elements in Gullah culture. The first sentence of paragraph 2 offers the extended family (choice (1)) as an example of West African influence on Gullah social life. In paragraph 3, we’re told that the Gullah conception of the “body spirit” is similar to a West African belief (choice (2)). As for choice (3), we’re told in paragraph 2 that membership in the extended family—itself an African element—“affects property rights;” the system of “heir’s land” is cited as an example. While it’s not clear that “heir’s land” existed in Africa, the method of acquiring land was indirectly influenced by the African institution of the extended family. Finally, choice (4) is mentioned an African influence by Jones-Jackson in the first paragraph.
7. Choice (3)
Here’s another inference question. The author states that “heir’s land” is a way for family members to acquire land through an “unwritten contract,” without paying for it. Any contract is by its nature an agreement, and since this kind of agreement is not on paper, it follows that it is orally communicated.
Choice (1) is way beyond the scope of this passage. The only government grant referred to is the original grant of the Sea Islands, after the Civil War. It’s not implied that this said anything about land tenure or individual acquisition of land.
Choice (2) distorts the passage by linking “heir’s land,” which operates within families, to marriage agreements between families. It’s never suggested that “heir’s land” has anything to do with marriage.
The fact that “heir’s land” is defined as an unwritten contract eliminates choice (4).
No alterations in communal rights are mentioned, disposing of choice (5).
8. Choice (5)
In this application question, look for a social experience that parallels one described, probably in more general terms, in the passage. The second paragraph states the importance of family ties and illustrates this by discussing how family members can acquire land through these ties. This is similar to acquiring a job, or any other benefit, through family connections. (Note that you don’t need to find evidence that the Sea Islanders get jobs in this way—the point is that choice (5) is logically similar to an experience of the Sea Islanders, not that they might have this exact experience.) Choice (1) is out, primarily because of its reference to court supervision. The only reference to property (the third and fourth sentences of paragraph 2) emphasizes exchanges within the family with no such supervision. More generally, courts and other government institutions are not mentioned anywhere in the passage.
Choice (2) is certainly not like anything in traditional Gullah life; it might be like an experience that has occurred since the “encroachments of tourism and commercialization,” except that we’re never told what these encroachments have been.
Choice (3) relates to the importance of family units, but it is the extended family that is important to the Gullah, whereas choice (3) involves unrelated adults.
Choice (4) comes out of left field (the GRE does occasionally throw in such farfetched choices). It has two problems. First, we’re not told whether or not Gullah culture contains artistic or other intellectual elements handed down from time immemorial as traditions. Second, choice (4) could refer to relearning a moribund tradition as well as to learning to perform in a living tradition; the passage, however, makes it clear that Gullah traditions as a whole are still very much alive.
9. Choice (1)
This is a tone question. The author is relatively objective, but still favorable to Gullah culture, calling it “unique” and “vital,” and its heritage “strong.” This makes the positive, but restrained, terms in choice (1) accurate.
Choice (2) describes a hesitant, wavering approach, one that would be characterized by mixed feelings or conflicting ideas—this simply doesn’t fit the author’s approach. Given the relative objectivity just mentioned, “detached” in choice (3) is not too far off, but “quizzical” (puzzled, bemused) is totally out. Choices (4) and (5) are the opposite of what you are looking for and show an un-GRE-like emotionality.
10. Choice (4)
Another detail question. Jones-Jackson’s views on the African influences on Gullah religious services appear in quotes in the final paragraph. The “classical, Ciceronian rhetorical style” and “sophistic ornaments”—elements of the style of Gullah prayers and sermons—inspire the congregation to make “raucous and joyous replies.” Choice (4) focuses on this latter aspect.
Choice (1) misinterprets the mention of “classical . . . style,” which refers to stylistic elements of the prayers and sermons, not to any type of music, which is never mentioned.
Choice (2) mistakes Africa as an influence on Gullah services for Africa as a topic of the sermons; sermon topics are never mentioned.
Choice (3) refers to a detail mentioned in paragraph 2; it is not clear what, if anything, this has to do with religious services. Choice (5) is never mentioned at all. We do not know what the Gullah people believe about their institutions.
Time: 10 Questions/12 Minutes
Directions: Each passage in this test is followed by questions based on its content. After reading a selection, choose the best response to each question. Your replies are to be based on what is actually stated or implied in the passage.
In some circles, Mendelssohn’s reputation diminished rapidly after his death in 1847. By 1852, he was already regarded by many as “the object of pitying disparagement.” European musical audiences, newly enamored with the expansiveness of Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde, soon found Mendelssohn’s music too restrained and academic.
As time progressed, post-Wagnerian anti-Romanticism did little to salvage the composer’s standing. Proponents of Schoenberg and his twelve-tone serialism regarded Mendelssohn as a quaint, conservative composer who crafted superficial, “tenderly sentimental” music.
Such “arbiters” as these have moved far too illiberally to certain conclusions. The atmospheric melodic beauty of the Overture to a Midsummer Night’s Dream shows the imprint of an original mind, anticipating the orchestral achievement of Rimsky-Korsakov. At the time of its composition, the Octet displayed unexampled lightness and rhythmic effect; the impressionistic Hebrides Overture inspired the painting of Turner. And Mendelssohn’s greatest pictorial works, the Scottish and Italian symphonies, constantly reveal new vistas. The work of one of the first, great nineteenth-century Nature composers, Mendelssohn’s music simply endures; critics would do well to ask why.
1. It can be inferred that the author apparently regards certain critics of Mendelssohn as
1 ignorant and ill bred
2 shortsighted and ungenerous
3 brilliantly perceptive
4 cowardly and overcautious
5 ambitious and insincere
2. The author refers to the proponents of Wagner and Schoenberg in the first two paragraphs primarily in order to do which of the following?
1 Explain the differences between their musical tastes
2 Make the point that the critics of Mendelssohn have also failed to appreciate the work of other great composers
3 Introduce the idea that the music critics of a given period usually lack sensitivity towards earlier composers
4 Illustrate how some people have unjustly neglected the musical achievement of Mendelssohn
5 Contrast the musical ideas of Wagner and Schoenberg to those of Mendelssohn
3. On the basis of the passage, the author would be likely to say that Mendelssohn’s music
I. was constrained by traditional forms and styles
II. was innovative and influential
III. should be judged on its own terms, not according to the standards of later taste
1 I only
2 II only
3 III only
4 I and II only
5 II and III only
4. The author’s argument in favor of Mendelssohn is primarily developed by
1 appealing to the authority of post-Wagnerian and anti-Romantic critics
2 citing examples that demonstrate Medelssohn’s originality and skill
3 pleading that Mendelssohn has been unfairly measured against far greater composers
4 pointing out that Mendelssohn’s critics have focused on unrepresentative aspects of his work
5 favorably comparing Mendelssohn’s achievements to those of admired composers like Rimsky-Korsakov and Wagner
Until the 1970s, the pattern of early marine animal evolution seemed to be well established. Most present-day animal phyla had appeared during the “Cambrian explosion,” an extraordinary burgeoning of multicellular life in the warm seas of the Cambrian period, between 570 and 500 million years ago. It was assumed that, despite the very large number of species that appeared during the Cambrian explosion, nearly all fit into the same rather small number of phyla that exist today. Each phylum—a group of organisms with the same basic pattern of organization, such as the radial symmetry of jellyfish and other coelenterates or the segmented structure of worms and other annelids—was seen as evolutionarily stable. Innumerable individual species have arisen and died out, but development and extinction were assumed to take place within existing phyla; the elimination of entire phyla was thought to be extremely rare.
However, a diverse group of marine fossils, known collectively as the “Problematica,” presented difficulties for this interpretation. The Problematica show patterns of organization so bizarre that it is hard to fit any of them into present-day phyla. They include the banana-shaped Tullimonstrum and the spiked, spiny Hallucigenia, creatures whose very names reflect the classifier’s discomfort. The “Ediacaran fauna,” which respired, absorbed nutrients, and eliminated wastes directly through their external surfaces, are also included among the Problematica. Theirs was an approach taken by only a few modern multicelled creatures (such as tapeworms) that are otherwise totally unlike them.
Recently, several theorists have argued that the Problematica are not just hard to classify—they are evidence that the conventional view of the Cambrian explosion is wrong. They contend that the Cambrian explosion represented the simultaneous appearance of a much larger number of animal phyla than exists today. Each was a separate “experiment” in basic body design, and the Cambrian seas teemed with many different phyla, or basic body plans, each represented by only a few species. Today, the number of phyla has fallen drastically, but each surviving phylum contains a much larger number of species. The Problematica, then, were not unsuccessful variants within present-day phyla; each represented a distinct phylum in its own right.
Revisionists and conventional theorists agree that modern marine species are products of natural selection. But the revisionists contend that the selection process eliminated not only particular unfavorable traits, but entire body plans and approaches to survival. The Ediacaran fauna, for example, represented a particular structural solution to the basic problems of gas and fluid exchange with the environment. This approach to body engineering was discarded at the same time as the Ediacaran fauna themselves were wiped out; given the improbability of duplicating an entire body plan through chance mutation, it was unlikely that this particular approach would ever be tried again.
5. The author implies that revisionists would view efforts to classify the Problematica in present-day phyla
1 enthusiastically
2 optimistically
3 skeptically
4 with indifference
5 with outrage
6. The description in the latter half of the second paragraph of how the Ediacaran fauna carried out respiration, absorption, and excretion tends to support the view that they
1 were probably not members of any present-day phylum
2 had physiologic processes different from those of any other known organisms
3 could not absorb or excrete fluids
4 were members of the same phylum as Tullimonstrum
5 were closely related to tapeworms
7. The passage implies that present-day phyla contain
1 only a few species each
2 species more dissimilar than many phyla in the Cambrian period
3 many species showing basic structural similarities
4 species that undergo no evolutionary change
5 species that have existed continuously since the Cambrian period
8. The author mentions coelenterates and annelids in order to give examples of
1 phyla that died out because their body plans were not viable
2 the structural patterns characteristic of some modern phyla
3 phyla that are closely related to the Problematica
4 phyla that have evolved since the Cambrian period
5 groups of organisms that do not fit into conventional evolutionary models
9. The passage implies that conventional and revisionist theorists disagree about all of the following EXCEPT
1 the accuracy of the conventional view of early marine evolution
2 the probable number of marine animal phyla during the Cambrian period
3 the likelihood of entire phyla becoming extinct
4 the applicability of the theory of natural selection to the Cambrian period
5 whether or not the Problematica can be assigned to present-day phyla
10. According to the passage, the Problematica are difficult to classify because
I. some had unusual shapes
II. some of them functioned physiologically differently from modern organisms
III. they became extinct at the end of the Cambrian period
1 I only
2 II only
3 I and II only
4 I and III only
5 I, II, and III
Mendelssohn Passage
Topic and Scope: Mendelssohn, especially Mendelssohn’s reputation after his death.
Purpose and Main Idea: The author considers that Mendelssohn’s reputation has been unfairly disparaged by critics, and rebuts their criticism using examples of Mendelssohn’s talent.
Paragraph Structure: Paragraph 1 concerns what happened to Mendelssohn’s reputation just after he died: People liked Wagner better. Paragraph 2 discusses how later schools of thought liked him even less. In paragraph 3, it is stated that these judgments are too harsh; examples are used to show that Mendelssohn’s work has value.
1. Choice (2)
This is a tone question. In the first sentence of the last paragraph, the author says Mendelssohn’s critics have “moved far too illiberally”; that is, they have gone too far in their criticism of Mendelssohn. This fits choice (2)’s “ungenerous” best.
You could easily eliminate the other choices. The author likes Mendelssohn, so it follows that he will dislike his critics. Eliminate choice (3). Choices (1) and (4) refer to critics as ill-bred and cowardly. These judgments are entirely too strong for the GRE. Finally, choice (5) makes claims about the critics the author never mentions. He may not agree with their judgment, but he never questions their sincerity or motives.
2. Choice (4)
This is a logic question; why is the author doing what he is doing? The first two paragraphs cover attitudes towards Mendelssohn by admirers of Wagner and Schoenberg and we are told that these admirers did not like Mendelssohn for a variety of reasons. He then goes on to say that they have “moved far too illiberally to certain conclusions”; that is, that they have overly disparaged Mendelssohn. This best fits with answer choice (4).
Choice (1) misrepresents the author’s purpose. The passage is about Mendelssohn, and has nothing to do with comparing the tastes of Wagner’s proponents with those of Schoenberg.
Choice (2) actually goes against what the author says: He states in the first paragraph that some who found Mendelssohn too restrained were enamored with Wagner.
Choice (3) goes too far. It is too general a statement for a tightly focused passage such as this.
Choice (5) is tricky, but although the author mentions the other composer’s styles, he does not do so in order to contrast them directly with Mendelssohn.
3. Choice (5)
For this Roman numeral inference question, take the statements one at a time.
Statement I reflects the views of Mendelssohn’s detractors, not of the author, who likes Mendelssohn. Discard this statement.
The views the author expresses in the third paragraph make it likely that he would agree with Statement II. If Mendelssohn’s music “shows the imprint of an original mind,” it should be innovative. If it inspired Turner to paint, it was influential.
Statement III pretty much agrees with the author’s main idea; the author argues that the later critics of Mendelssohn have treated him too harshly.
4. Choice (2)
The author primarily defends Mendelssohn in paragraph 3. He does this by citing a number of examples that illustrate how good Mendelssohn actually is. This equates most closely with answer choice (2).
Choice (1) is out—the post-Wagnerian and anti-Romantic critics didn’t like Mendelssohn (paragraph 2).
Choice (3) is also incorrect; the author does not seem to regard any of the other composers mentioned as greater than Mendelssohn.
Choice (4) is way off; this is never mentioned anywhere in the passage.
Choice (5) is also wrong; nowhere does the author compare Mendelssohn to Wagner in order to show Mendelssohn in a good light.
Early Marine Evolution Passage
Topic and Scope: The pattern of early marine evolution, particularly whether or not there were more phyla immediately after the Cambrian explosion than today. Purpose and Main Idea: The author considers the argument between conventional theorists and revisionists. Conventional theorists thought they had early marine evolution figured out, assigning even odd-ball fossils like the Problematica to present-day phyla. The revisionists, in contrast, think the Problematica occupy phyla of their own, which arose during the Cambrian explosion and then died out.
Paragraph Structure: Paragraph 1 consists of a discussion of the appearance of the present day phyla during the Cambrian explosion and a few notes on what makes up a phylum. Paragraph 2 describes the Problematica and why they don’t fit in present-day phyla. Paragraph 3 details the conclusions that revisionists draw from this—there were other phyla that appeared in the Cambrian and then died out. Paragraph 4 is a summing up of the difference between the conventional theorists’ and the revisionists’ views.
5. Choice (3)
This inference question is a good illustration of the value of a firm grip on the main idea and author’s purpose. The revisionists think the Problematica occupy phyla of their own, which arose during the Cambrian explosion and then died out. Hence, they are critical of trying to classify them into present phyla. Choice (3) reflects this attitude.
Choices (1) and (2) misidentify the revisionists’ point of view; since they see these efforts as wrong-headed, they won’t react in either of these ways.
Choice (4) is wrong because they have a clear, sharp point of view on the question.
Choice (5) has exaggerated their negative response to the point of absurdity—its tone is not typical of the GRE.
6. Choice (1)
This looks like an explicit detail question, but is actually an logic question. Why is the author doing what he is doing? Paragraph 1 states the conventional view that the Cambrian species all (or nearly all) fit in present phyla; paragraph 2 challenges this idea, and then gives several examples. Obviously, the examples given will be creatures that don’t fit neatly into present phyla, which is choice (1). Choice (1) is also specifically justified by the last sentence of paragraph 2: If the Ediacaran fauna approach to respiration was like that of only a few modern creatures that are totally different from them in other ways, then they would not fit comfortably into any known phylum.
Choice (2) is wrong. At least some of these physiological processes were similar to those of tapeworms; however, since they differed from tapeworms in nearly every other way, choice (5) is wrong too. They could and did absorb and excrete fluids (choice (3))—even though they did it in an unusual manner. And the fact that they didn’t resemble modern creatures doesn’t mean that they were closely related to Tullimonstrum. All we know about Tullimonstrum is that it was banana shaped.
7. Choice (3)
This is an inference question about present-day phyla, so look in the passage in which modern phyla are mentioned. A phylum (as stated in the middle of paragraph 1) is a group of organisms with “the same basic pattern of organization,” that is, possessing similar structures; today, there is a small number of phyla, each containing a large number of species (fourth sentence of paragraph 3). Putting these two points together gives us choice (3).
Choice (1) is the situation that existed during the Cambrian, according to the revisionists. Choice (2) is also out; diversity within phyla is not mentioned.
Choices (4) and (5) are contradicted by the discussion of natural selection in paragraph 4: All species undergo evolutionary change, and few, if any, have existed continuously for 500 million years.
8. Choice (2)
This is another logic question. These organisms are mentioned in the middle of paragraph 1, when the author defines phylum as “a group of organisms with the same basic pattern of organization,” such as the “radial symmetry of jellyfish and other coelenterates.” The author is giving familiar examples to illustrate the concept of a pattern of organization, and jellyfish and worms are present-day creatures. Choice (2) captures this idea.
These phyla have not died out, so you can eliminate choice (1).
As they are present-day phyla, they are not closely related to the Problematica (choice (3)).
The passage never mentions when these organisms evolved (choice (4)).
Since they are mentioned in paragraph 1, which deals with the conventional view, they do fit conventional models (Choice (5)).
9. Choice (4)
This detail question asks what the conventional and revisionist theorists do not disagree about. They disagree on nearly everything, but they agree on choice (4), as stated explicitly at the beginning of paragraph 4. This is our answer. (That sentence doesn’t mention the Cambrian period specifically, but the entire passage is about the Cambrian.)
Choice (1) is an “au contraire” choice: It actually identifies the scientists’ overall disagreement.
Choices (2), (3), and (5) are also specific points of disagreement.
10. Choice (3)
This is a detail question, so go to paragraph 2 in which the Problematica are discussed.
Statement I is true; the Problematica had unusual “patterns of organization”—that is, unusual shapes—which make them difficult to fit into modern phyla.
Statement II is also true; the second half of paragraph 3 notes that the unusual physiology of the Ediacaran fauna place it within the Problematica.
Statement III is not mentioned in the passage; we don’t know when these organisms became extinct.
Time: 10 Questions/12 Minutes
Directions: Each passage in this test is followed by questions based on its content. After reading a selection, choose the best response to each question. Your replies are to be based on what is actually stated or implied in the passage.
The acquisition of vocabulary has been less intensively studied than the internalization of operational grammar, but it is an equally complex task. To learn a new word, a child must associate sound and meaning; surprisingly, the concept may take less time to master than the mechanics of recognizing and producing the word. It is also harder to learn distinctions within semantic categories than between them: A child may know that fuchsia refers to a color and not a smell, but be unsure of what color it is.
Vocabulary study through word lists and dictionaries, as practiced in school, poses new problems, primarily because of the mechanics of dictionary study as opposed to interaction with responsive adults. The most common error is that of substitution: A child looking up an unfamiliar word such as meticulous, and finding a familiar phrase such as very careful as part of the definition, will treat the new word as interchangeable with the familiar phrase, producing sentences such as I was meticulous about falling off the cliff. Hence, though the normal child masters some 80,000 words in sixteen years—about fourteen per day—little of this learning takes place in school.
1. The author is primarily concerned with
1 encouraging more intensive study of vocabulary acquisition
2 describing some aspects and problems of the process of vocabulary acquisition
3 criticizing the teaching of vocabulary in schools
4 comparing the processes of learning vocabulary and grammar
5 resolving contradictions in the theoretical understanding of vocabulary development
2. The passage implies that learning vocabulary from dictionaries may be difficult because
1 the child cannot test the understanding of new words by interaction with another person
2 dictionary definitions do not reveal all the shades of meaning of a word
3 the child is required to learn too many words each day
4 teachers disagree over the proper way to study from a dictionary
5 dictionaries do not indicate the rules of grammar that the child must master
3. The author suggests that a child studying with a dictionary may use a new word incorrectly in a sentence because he or she
1 is not familiar with any of the words used in the definitions
2 is able to understand the word’s meaning but not to compose a sentence using the word
3 is unaware that the word may not have exactly the same meaning as a phrase used in defining it
4 does not know how to use the alphabetized entries in a dictionary
5 cannot understand the dictionary symbols used to indicate pronunciation
4. It can be inferred that a typical growing child learns most of his or her vocabulary
1 before acquiring a knowledge of grammar
2 from dictionaries and word lists
3 without being able to associate sound and meaning
4 through interaction with adults
5 by memorizing semantic categories
It is notorious that breakthroughs in science often come in tandem: The same, or almost the same, theoretical advance is made simultaneously by two or more investigators. Watson and Crick “raced” Linus Pauling to verify the helical structure of DNA; Darwin and Alfred Wallace announced the essentials of evolutionary theory simultaneously in 1858. Why should this occur? Why—to take another example—should Newton and Leibniz have worked out the differential calculus independently and in isolation from one another, when they were not even working on the same sorts of problems?
Newton’s work on the calculus stemmed from his interest in the physical problem of the measurement of continuously changing quantities. Take, for example, the problem of determining the velocity of a freely falling body at a given instant. The body is constantly accelerating due to gravity. An approximate velocity at any time may be found by measuring the distance traveled over a very brief time interval, such as a hundredth of a second; if one reduces the time interval measured until it approaches zero, the approximate velocity over the interval approaches the actual velocity at any instant as a limit. Newton’s genius was to grasp how to calculate such a change over an infinitesimal time period through a mathematical operation known as differentiation.
For various reasons, Newton delayed publishing a clear account of his calculus for nearly forty years. In the meantime, Leibniz approached the calculus from a completely different standpoint, that of the formal geometric problem of determining the tangent to a curve (later, for the integral calculus, the area under a curve). This geometric problem was mathematically equivalent to Newton’s consideration of bodies in motion, however, since the changing position of such a body over time can be plotted graphically as a curve in which the tangent to the curve at any point represents the velocity of the body at a given instant. Thus, Leibniz’s formal geometric approach duplicated Newton’s results.
This phenomenon of simultaneous discovery is surprising only to a public that views such breakthroughs as solitary acts of genius. In reality, Newton and Leibniz’s ground had been thoroughly prepared in advance. In the century before Newton’s birth, Europe had seen an explosion of scientific inquiry. Copernicus, Kepler, and others had formulated the laws of planetary motion and celestial mechanics. More specifically, when he began his mathematical work, Newton was already familiar with Descarte’s coordinate geometry, the mathematics of infinitesimal intervals recently developed by John Wallis, and the method of finding tangents through differentiation worked out by Isaac Barrow. Thus, both the scientific problems and the conceptual tools that stimulated and facilitated Newton’s astonishingly rapid development of the differential calculus were already the common property of science. Given Newton’s delay in publishing his work, an independent discovery of the calculus by some other genius became not only possible but likely.
5. The primary purpose of this passage is to
1 present mathematical discoveries
2 clarify a recurring phenomenon in scientific history
3 solve a long-standing puzzle in intellectual history
4 describe a period of rapid scientific change
5 recollect a scandalous incident
6 According to the author, Newton devised the differential calculus in an attempt to understand
1 why falling bodies accelerate
2 how to measure continuously varying quantities
3 how to measure the area under a curve
4 the relationship between average and actual speeds
5 how to find tangents by differentiation
7. It can be inferred that the author regards the development of the calculus as
1 an outgrowth of previous intellectual developments
2 a unique act of genius
3 an achievement whose significance has been overestimated
4 an unusual case of near-simultaneous discovery
5 a breakthrough that solved a classic scientific problem
8. The passage implies that Newton and Leibniz arrived at similar results because
1 they used similar approaches
2 they knew of each other’s work
3 no one had previously considered the problem of continuous motion
4 the problems they considered were mathematically equivalent
5 they were competing to win recognition for the discovery of the calculus
9. The author suggests that cases of simultaneous discovery
1 cannot really be called breakthroughs, since the important work has been done by others
2 are extremely rare in science
3 are made by individuals unaware of the historical influences on their thought
4 seem remarkable to a public influenced by an inaccurate notion of genius
5 usually occur when one discoverer delays publication of his results
10. In the final paragraph the author draws connections between the work of Leibniz and Newton and the work of Copernicus and Kepler primarily in order to
1 provide support for the “great man” view of scientific history
2 argue that the work of most scientific geniuses reveals unusually coincidental patterns of discovery
3 expose the myth of independent scientific discovery
4 describe the evolutionary nature of scientific achievement
5 compare the work of physicists to that of mathematicians
Acquiring Vocabulary Passage
Topic and Scope: Acquiring vocabulary, especially why it can be difficult.
Purpose and Main Idea: This is a descriptive passage.
The author is not concerned with attacking or defending a viewpoint; rather, she wants to detail a few difficulties in learning vocabulary.
Paragraph Structure: Paragraph 1 concerns how a child must associate a sound and a meaning to learn a word and cannot learn a detailed description right away. Paragraph 2 states that merely learning words from a dictionary leads to misunderstandings.
1. Choice (2)
This is a global question, and the answer should be summed up by the purpose and main idea of the passage.
Choice (2) fits this nicely: The “aspects” (associating sound and meaning, learning distinctions between and within semantic categories) are the topic of paragraph 1, while the “problems” (the difficulty of learning through dictionary study) are the topic of paragraph 2.
Choice (1) is beyond the scope of the passage, since it is purely descriptive.
Choice (3) focuses on a detail, the topic of paragraph 2, only.
Choice (4) never happens; grammar is never mentioned after the first sentence.
Choice (5) is also beyond the scope of the passage; no theoretical contradictions are mentioned or implied.
2. Choice (1)
This is an inference question that refers to learning from a dictionary, so look at paragraph 2. The first sentence of paragraph 2 says that dictionary learning “poses new problems, primarily because of the mechanics of dictionary study as opposed to interaction with responsive adults.” The paragraph then goes on to give an example of a misunderstanding. It is implied that feedback from a person is needed to clear up this type of error; this paraphrases choice (1).
Choice (2) is wrong because it refers only to the example of a misunderstanding (the definition of meticulous) without answering the question.
Choice (3) is probably referring to the information that the typical child successfully learns about fourteen words a day; there’s no indication that the child is required to learn this many in school, or that that’s why dictionary learning is unsuccessful.
Choice (4) is out; since there’s no reference at all to any disagreements among teachers, it’s beyond the scope.
Choice (5) is also incorrect; we’re talking about learning vocabulary, not grammar.
3. Choice (3)
This is a detail question, covered by the example in the later part of paragraph 2. The example of the child trying to use meticulous in a sentence indicates that the child makes an error because he or she assumes that meticulous means exactly the same thing as very careful. That is, the child is unaware that the word may not have exactly the same meaning as a phrase used in defining it (choice (3)).
Eliminate choices (1) and (2); the example shows that the child is familiar with some words in the definition and can compose a syntactically correct sentence.
Choice (4) is out—the child must know how to use alphabetized entries, since he or she has looked up meticulous.
Choice (5) is irrelevant in this context.
4. Choice (4)
The last sentence of the passage tells us that a typical child learns 80,000 words over sixteen years, but that “little of this learning takes place in school.” In paragraph 2 we learn that vocabulary study in school is relatively unsuccessful because of the lack of “interaction with responsive adults.” We can infer that such interaction is how most successful learning takes place, and choice (4) is our answer.
Choice (1) picks up on the reference to grammar in the first sentence; from the passage, we don’t know whether vocabulary is learned before, after, or at the same time as grammar.
Choice (2) is wrong because the author indicates that learning from dictionaries and word lists is not very successful.
Choice (3) is out, since the second sentence in paragraph 1 makes it clear that successful learning does involve associating sound and meaning.
Choice (5) distorts the last sentence of paragraph 1; the child does not necessarily memorize semantic categories, as opposed to learning to use them in practice, and must also learn much else besides.
Newton and Leibniz Passage
Topic and Scope: Why scientific discoveries come in pairs, especially the discovery of the differential calculus by Newton and Leibniz.
Purpose and Main Idea: The author wants to explain a phenomenon: why breakthroughs come in “tandem.” Using the example of Newton and Leibniz, she posits that this occurs because the groundwork needed for breakthroughs is widely known, and only insight needs to be added to achieve the breakthrough.
Paragraph Structure: Paragraph 1 discusses why scientific discoveries come in tandem. Paragraph 2 describes how Newton discovered the differential calculus, and paragraph 3 how Leibniz discovered the differential calculus. Finally, paragraph 4 explains why they discovered the differential calculus at the same time—they were working from groundwork prepared in advance, and only insight was needed.
5. Choice (2)
Here we have a global question that asks for the primary purpose of the passage. This should be a paraphrase of the primary purpose you decided upon when you read the passage. The author wishes to explain why breakthroughs occur in tandem. This is closest to choice (2).
Choices (1) and (4) are too narrow. The author is interested in the calculus and the scientific advances of Newton’s time only insofar as they illustrate the broader points about how great discoveries are made.
Choice (3) is out, since the author never implies that the “puzzle” of Newton and Leibniz’s simultaneous discovery is “long-standing,” or that she is going to “solve” this puzzle.
Choice (5) is also incorrect. The passage is not merely descriptive, and the incidents described in the passage could scarcely be called “scandalous.”
6. Choice (2)
This is a detail question, so go back to the second paragraph in which the author talks about Newton’s discovery of the differential calculus. Choice (2) is stated explicitly in the first sentence of paragraph 2.
Choice (1) is wrong because the acceleration of falling bodies is mentioned by the author as an example of the problem of continuous motion; it is not clear that this was the specific problem Newton was working on, or that Newton didn’t understand “why” falling bodies accelerate.
Choice (3) is mentioned as one of Leibniz’s concerns.
Choice (4) is not mentioned at all.
Choice (5) is something Newton already knew—this problem had been worked out by Isaac Barrow (see the last paragraph).
7. Choice (1)
The main question raised by the passage is: Why do simultaneous discoveries occur? The answer, given in the last paragraph, is: because the groundwork is prepared in advance. This point is made specifically in relation to Newton and Leibniz in the second sentence of paragraph 4. This idea is paraphrased in choice (1).
Choice (2) is an au contraire answer. The fact that Newton and Leibniz discovered the calculus independently rules it out.
Choice (3) is way off. The author doesn’t question the significance of the achievement—only the misconceived idea of “solitary acts of genius.”
Choice (4) is another au contraire answer. The point of the passage is that such occurrences are not unusual. Choice (5) is out since we are not told that the problem of continuous motion was a “classic” one. On the contrary, it is implied that the problem had been posed by recent developments.
8. Choice (4)
Paragraph 3 states that although Leibniz’s approach was “completely different” from Newton’s (ruling out choice (1)), the geometric problem he considered was “mathematically equivalent” to Newton’s and “thus . . . duplicated Newton’s results.” Choice (4) sums this up.
Leibniz and Newton worked independently, ruling out Choice (2).
Choice (3) is not stated, and wouldn’t explain their similar results anyway.
Choice (5) is absurd, given their isolation and Newton’s delay in publishing (first sentence of paragraph 4).
9. Choice (4)
This choice paraphrases the first sentence of the last paragraph.
Choice (1) goes too far. The author does stress the preliminary work done by others, but doesn’t suggest that the discovery of the calculus (or similar discoveries) was not a breakthrough.
Choice (2) is contradicted in the first paragraph.
Choice (3) is not implied—we don’t know what influences Leibniz, Newton, Darwin, et al., may have been aware of. Newton is the only example given of delayed publication, making choice (5) unlikely.
10. Choice (4)
This is a logic question—what is the author trying to do by drawing this connection? Copernicus and Kepler are mentioned in the fourth sentence of the last paragraph, in the context of the series of scientific and mathematical advances that “prepared the ground” for Newton and Leibniz. So the point is that science builds on earlier work; it is evolutionary even when making great advances.
The “great man” view in choice (1) probably refers to the misconception that breakthroughs are “solitary acts of genius” (first sentence of paragraph 4); this is not the author’s view.
Choice (2) is a big overstatement; the passage says that simultaneous discoveries occur often, not all the time.
Choice (3) overstates the case. The author doesn’t think independent discovery is a myth at all. Newton and Leibniz are examples of independent discovery. Neither one, of course, was wholly “independent” of previous developments, but their discoveries were made on their own.
Choice (5) never happens. Physicists, or at least astronomers, are mentioned, as are mathematicians, but they are not compared.
Time: 10 Questions/12 Minutes
Directions: Each passage in this test is followed by questions based on its content. After reading a selection, choose the best response to each question. Your replies are to be based on what is actually stated or implied in the passage.
Desert plant populations have evolved sophisticated physiological and behavioral traits that aid survival in arid conditions. Some send out long, unusually deep taproots; others utilize shallow but widespread roots, which allow them to absorb large, intermittent flows of water. Certain plants protect their access to water. The creosote bush produces a potent root toxin that inhibits the growth of competing root systems. Daytime closure of stomata exemplifies a further genetic adaptation; guard cells work to minimize daytime water loss, later allowing the stomata to open when conditions are more favorable to gas exchange with the environment.
Certain adaptations reflect the principle that a large surface area facilitates water and gas exchange. Most plants have small leaves, modified leaves (spines), or no leaves at all.The main food-producing organ is not the leaf but the stem, which is often green and nonwoody. Thick, waxy stems and cuticles, seen in succulents such as cacti and agaves, also help conserve water. Spines and thorns (modified branches) protect against predators and also minimize water loss.
1. The passage refers to the spines and thorns of desert plants as
I. genetically evolved structural adaptations that protect against predation II. genetic modifications that aid in the reduction of water loss structures that do not participate directly in food production III. structures that do not participate directly in food production
1 I only
2 III only
3 I and II only
4 II and III only
5 I, II, and III
2. The author suggests that the guard cells of desert plants act to do which of the following?
I. Facilitate gas and water exchange between the plants and their surroundings II. Cause the stomata of desert plants to remain closed during daytime hours III. Respond to sudden, heavy rainfalls by forcing the plants’ stomata to open
1 I only
2 II only
3 III only
4 I and II only
5 I, II, and III
3. The passage suggests that which of the following weather-related conditions would most benefit plants with shallow root systems?
1 An unusually prolonged drought
2 A windstorm
3 A flash flood
4 A light spring rain
5 A winter snowfall
4. The adaptations of desert plants to their environment would tend to support the statement that
1 the rate of genetic evolution is greater in the desert than in more temperate surroundings
2 structures in a plant that usually perform one function may, under certain conditions, perform different functions
3 while the amount of leaf surface area is critical for a desert plant, it is much less so for plants in most other environments
4 desert plants do not have many physiological and behavioral traits in common with other plants
5 desert plants could probably adapt to life in a variety of harsh ecosystems
Historians have long known that there were two sides to the Populist movement of the 1890s: a progressive side, embodying the protests of farmers against big business, and a darker side, marked by a distrust of Easterners, immigrants, and intellectuals. In the 1950s, one school of U.S. social thinkers constructed a parallel between this dark side of Populism and the contemporary anti-communist crusade spearheaded by Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy, which attacked liberalism, Eastern intellectuals, and civil liberties in general. To Seymour Martin Lipset, McCarthyism represented “the sour dregs of Populism”; to Edward Shils, McCarthyism, like Populism, exemplified “the ambiguous American impulse toward ‘direct democracy.’”
Noting that McCarthyism and Populism had both found their strongest support in the agrarian Midwest, Lipset argued that voters who backed agrarian protest movements during earlier economic crises had supported McCarthy in the post-World War II period of prosperity. “It would be interesting to know,” Lipset wrote, “what percentage of those who supported the isolationist but progressive Bob La Follette in Wisconsin now backs McCarthy.” But, in the eyes of these writers, the appeal of McCarthyism extended beyond the agrarian base of Populism to include urban groups such as industrial workers. Lipset claimed that “the lower classes, especially the workers,” had backed McCarthy. In a more sweeping fashion, Lewis Feuer claimed that “it was the American lower classes . . . who gave their overwhelming support to the attacks in recent years on civil liberties.”
Writing a few years later, political scientist Michael Paul Rogin challenged these superficially plausible notions, contending that they merely embodied the writers’ own assumptions about the supposed intolerance of lower-class groups, rather than a valid interpretation of McCarthyism.Rogin critically examined their assertions by the simple method of testing them against the evidence. He tested Lipset’s claims about the continuity of McCarthyism and earlier agrarian protest movements by breaking down statewide voting statistics on a county-by-county and precinct-by-precinct basis. He found that Wisconsin counties that had voted strongly for Progressives before World War II did not support McCarthy; McCarthy’s support was concentrated in his home region and in ethnic German areas that had been traditionally conservative. The old Progressive vote had in fact gone to McCarthy’s opponents, the Democrats.
To test Lipset’s generalizations about McCarthy’s support among lower-class groups, Rogin attempted to determine whether industrial workers had, in fact, backed McCarthy.Correlating income and employment statistics with voting records, Rogin found that the greater the employment in industry in a given Wisconsin county, the lower was McCarthy’s share of the vote. Rogin concluded that the thesis of “McCarthyism as Populism” should be judged “not as the product of science but as a . . . venture into conservative political theory.”
5. The author would probably assert that Populism and McCarthyism
1 were basically similar
2 were completely opposite in character
3 were responses to, respectively, agrarian and industrial conditions
4 were essentially dissimilar movements that shared some common features
5 each had both a progressive and a darker side
6. It can be inferred that Rogin’s most serious criticism of Lipset, Feuer, and Shils’s methodology would probably be that they
1 reached incorrect conclusions about McCarthy
2 equated support for McCarthyism with anti-intellectualism
3 placed too much emphasis on the dual character of Populism
4 failed to examine the evidence that could support or weaken their conclusions
5 offered a theory that could not easily be tested
7. Rogin studied the class character of Wisconsin voters in order to
I. challenge the idea that less affluent socioeconomic groups supported McCarthy II. explain the underlying causes of the links between Populism and McCarthyism III. account for important changes in voting patterns during the twentieth century
1 I only
2 III only
3 I and II only
4 II and III only
5 I, II, and III
8. It can be inferred that both Lipset and Rogin made which of the following assumptions about voter support for McCarthy?
1 The voting patterns of industrial workers are representative of lower-class political preferences.
2 Industrial workers usually vote for conservative political candidates.
3 Supporters of McCarthy were almost exclusively of lower-class origin.
4 Lower-class voters generally tend to vote in favor of civil rights measures.
5 Voters in Midwestern counties are typical of American voters elsewhere.
9. According to the passage, Rogin concluded that the writings of Lipset, Shils, and Feuer
1 intentionally distorted historical evidence
2 were flawed by political presuppositions
3 lent support to attacks on civil liberties
4 took an overly statistical approach to historical evidence
5 were marked by an anti-intellectual bias
10. The author is primarily concerned with
1 comparing positions in a political debate
2 advocating the use of statistical methods in historical research
3 examining the similarities between two political movements
4 explaining why historical conclusions should be revised according to later discoveries
5 describing an instance of flawed historiography
Desert Plants Passage
Topic and Scope: Desert plants and the adaptations that help them survive.
Purpose and Main Idea: This is a descriptive passage.The author is not concerned with attacking or defending a viewpoint; instead, she wants to detail how plants survive in arid environments. Basically, we have a shopping list of plant adaptations.
Paragraph Structure: In paragraph 1, we find out how desert plants have evolved traits that help them survive, with illustrations of these traits. Paragraph 2 provides more adaptations.
1. Choice (5)
Reread the section of the passage about spines and thorns (paragraph 2) to answer this question. Take the statements one at a time.
Statement I is true. Spines and thorns, which are identified in the second paragraph as modified leaves and branches, are among the adaptations that the plants have developed to help them cope with the environment.
Statement II is true. In the last sentence, it’s stated that spines and thorns help minimize water loss.
Statement III is true. The third sentence of the second paragraph says that most of a desert plant’s food is produced in its stem, not in its leaves, so it’s pretty clear that spines and thorns have little or nothing to do with food production.
2. Choice (4)
This is another detail question. Reread the section on the functioning of guard cells, mentioned in the sentence that concludes paragraph 1. This sentence discusses two closely related plant features: the stomata and the guard cells. You read first that daytime closing of the stomata is an adaptation that helps to minimize daytime water loss.The second half of the sentence clearly implies that it’s the guard cells that control this opening and closing of the stomata. Now, take the statements one at a time.
Statement I is true. The guard cells force the stomata to close during the day, to minimize water loss, and they later cause the stomata to open when conditions for gas exchange between the plant and its environment are more favorable. So they must facilitate gas and water exchange.
Statement II is clearly suggested by the reference to guard cells forcing the stomata to close during the day.
Statement III is unjustified. Nothing links the functioning of guard cells to sudden downpours.
3. Choice (3)
The question stem is looking for the weather-related condition that would especially benefit plants with shallow root systems. Shallow root systems are mentioned up in the second sentence, and the point is that these specially adapted roots allow desert plants to take advantage of heavy, irregular flows of water. The only choice that comes close to this is a flash flood.
Choice (1) and (2) are impossible; neither drought nor windstorms involve water.
Choice (4) won’t work because a light rain doesn’t fit with the idea of a large, sudden quantity of water.
Choice (5) is out, since this choice doesn’t suggest water flows at all.
4. Choice (2)
The second paragraph contains several examples of structures that in desert plants perform different functions than those they normally perform in plants in other environments. Spines and thorns in desert plants are leaves and branches, modified to reduce water loss. And as a result of their lack of normal leaves, most desert plants produce their food in their green, fleshy stems. This fits well with choice (2).
Choices (1), (4), and (5) are beyond the scope of the passage—there’s no information to support any of these statements.
Choice (3) is out. While the passage does indicate that a small leaf surface area is a critical factor for desert plants, nothing suggests that leaf surface area isn’t critical for plants in most other environments.
McCarthyism Passage
Topic and Scope: McCarthyism, specifically from who it drew its support.
Purpose and Main Idea: The author claims that although some would argue that McCarthyism drew its support from those who supported Populism and from industrialized workers, later research does not support this contention.
Paragraph Structure: Paragraph 1 presents the idea that McCarthyism represents an offshoot of Populism.
Paragraph 2 describes the theories of Lipset, Shils, and Feuer, who claim that McCarthyism drew its support from Populism’s base in the agrarian Midwest and extended it to industrial workers. Paragraph 3 describes the case against this theory; according to Rogin, counties in the Midwest that voted Populist did not vote for McCarthy.Paragraph 4 details Rogin’s case against the ideas presented in the second paragraph—statistics show that industrialized workers did not in fact vote for McCarthy. The passage concludes by supporting the case against a linkage of McCarthyism with Populism.
5. Choice (4)
This question covers the broad outline of the passage, so treat it as a global question and look to your purpose and main idea. Choice (4) best describes the author’s attitude toward McCarthyism and Populism—although they were superficially similar, they were essentially dissimilar.
Choice (1) is an au contraire choice; it actually states the case against the author’s views.
Choice (2) is too harsh. The first paragraph does draw some parallels between both movements.
Choice (3) is partly right, but partly wrong. Populism was, partially at least, a response to the conditions of farmers, but nowhere is it suggested that McCarthyism was a response to industrial conditions. The passage suggests quite the contrary: As described in the last paragraph, Rogin showed that McCarthyism had little support from workers employed in industry.
Choice (5) is out, as it’s never suggested that McCarthyism has a progressive side. Only Populism is described (in the first sentence) as having both of these, a progressive and a darker side.
6. Choice (4)
The substance of Rogin’s criticism of Lipset, Feuer, and Shils is explained in the last two paragraphs. The second sentence of the third paragraph says what Rogin did: He “critically examined their assertions by the simple method of testing them against the evidence.” This really tells you all you need to know to pick the right choice, choice (4).If you missed this, both of these last two paragraphs are spent describing how Rogin showed that grass roots voting patterns in both rural Wisconsin counties and more industrial Wisconsin counties failed to support the claims made by Lipset, Feuer, and Shils about who really did and didn’t support McCarthy. What Rogin and the author are clearly suggesting is that Lipset, Feuer, and Shils failed to do their homework properly.
Choice (1) doesn’t work, because Rogin never really quarrels with any descriptions of McCarthy. The quarrel is with the misrepresentation of lower-class voters and the real nature of Populism.
Choice (2) doesn’t work, since the passage never describes Rogin as disagreeing with the idea that McCarthyism is linked to anti-intellectualism.
Choice (3) is wrong since it seems that Lipset, Feuer, and Shils seemingly placed too little emphasis on the dual nature of Populism. They failed to perceive the continuity of the progressive aspects of Populism among voters in Wisconsin.
Choice (5) is contradicted: Rogin was able to submit the conclusions of the three writers to a test—a devastating one—by taking a close look at the voting patterns in Wisconsin counties.
7. Choice (1)
The stem is asking why Rogin studied the class character of Wisconsin voting patterns. Primarily, he did this to check to see if the voting patterns supported or contradicted the arguments of Lipset, Feuer, and Shils. They argued that lower-class farmers and industrial workers provided crucial voter support for both Populism and McCarthyism, and Rogin performed his study of voting patterns in order to challenge their conclusions, by showing that lower-class farmers and workers in fact did not give their votes to McCarthy. Statement I reflects this.
Statement II is wrong since Rogin was out to disprove the alleged links between Populism and McCarthyism, not explain them.
Statement III is way beyond the scope of the passage.
8. Choice (1)
In the last half of the second paragraph the passage indicates that Lipset argued that lower-class support of McCarthy included urban industrial workers, which he describes as “the lower classes, especially the workers.” The last paragraph describes the study in which Rogin found that voters in counties with high industrial employment tended to vote against McCarthy. Rogin used this study to support his counterassertion that McCarthy in fact did not enjoy extensive support among the lower classes. Thus, an assumption made by both men is that voters among industrial workers can be classified as lower-class voters.
Choice (2) is out; Rogin’s overall thesis is to argue that lower-class voters voted more progressively than Lipset, Feuer, and Shils admit.
Choice (3) clearly isn’t an assumption of Rogin’s, who suggests something quite different: McCarthy lacked extensive support among lower classes.
Choice (4) is beyond the scope of the passage. There’s not enough information to conclude that either scholar assumed this.
Choice (5) has no support, since neither Lipset nor Rogin is described in this passage as arguing that Midwestern voters are representative of more general political patterns among American voters.
9. Choice (2)
This is a detail question, and since it asks you “[a]ccording to the passage,” it will be a paraphrase of something that appears within it. Correct choice (2) paraphrases the first sentence of the third paragraph and the concluding sentence of the passage. Rogin’s overall charge against Lipset, Feuer, and Shils is that they not only reach faulty conclusions but are politically biased against the lower classes from the very beginning. It’s this latter charge that’s summed up in choice (2).
Choice (1) goes too far. Rogin never charges deliberate falsification of evidence by the three men.
Choice (3) is out. Never does Rogin imply that the men’s viewpoints will support attacks on civil liberties.
Choice (4) puts things backwards. It’s Rogin who makes scrupulous use of statistical analysis. This is what Lipset, Feuer, and Shils failed to do.
Choice (5) is out since Rogin never suggests that the writings of Lipset, Feuer, and Shils were essentially anti-intellectual. Rogin might say that are intellectually or professionally incompetent, since he believes their research methods lack credibility, but this choice distorts this idea.
10. Choice (5)
For this global question, go to your purpose and main idea.The author’s main purpose is to describe the rebuff to the views on McCarthyism expressed in the second paragraph.The author states that these conclusions were not based on real evidence, and suggested that they were shaped by preconceived prejudices. These are flaws in historical methodology, choice (4).
Choice (1) uses the wrong verb. The author is not comparing the views; rather, he is supporting one particular view, that of Rogin.
Choice (2) goes for a detail—Rogin’s research methods. And choice (3) distorts the author’s point of view that the two movements were fundamentally dissimilar.
Choice (4) is out because, although the author would agree with it, it does not address the main point of the passage.
Chapter 6: Strategies for GRE Writing
The Analytical Writing Measure consists of two timed essay sections. The first is what (ETS) calls an “Issue” essay: You’ll be shown two essay topics—each a sentence or paragraph that expresses an opinion on an issue of general interest. You must choose one of the two topics. You then have 45 minutes to plan and write an essay that communicates your own view on the issue. Whether you agree or disagree with the opinion on the screen is irrelevant: What matters is that you support your view with relevant examples and statements.
The second of the two writing tasks is the “Argument” essay. This time, you will be shown a paragraph that argues a certain point. You will then be given 30 minutes to assess that argument’s logic. As with the “Issue” essay, it won’t matter whether you agree with what you see on the screen.
STYLE POINTS
Effective GRE style is:
• Concise
• Forceful
• Correct
How the Computer-Based Essays Are Administered
At the start of the computer-based Analytical Writing section, you will be given a brief tutorial on how to use the word processor. If you aren’t comfortable with complex word processing programs, don’t worry. The program you’ll use on the GRE is quite simple, as the only commands you’ll use are cut, paste, and undo. You’ll be well acquainted with the program’s commands by the time you start writing.
KEEP IT SIMPLE
Write your essay in a clear, straightforward manner. Keep word choice, sentence structure, and your argument simple (but not simplistic).
THE FOUR BASIC PRINCIPLES OF GRE WRITING
GRE writing is a simple, two-stage process: First you decide what you want to say about a topic, and then you figure out how to say it. If your writing style isn’t clear, your ideas won’t come across, no matter how brilliant they are. Good GRE English is not only grammatical but also clear and concise, and by using some basic principles, you’ll be able to express your ideas clearly and effectively in both of your essays.
Your Control of Language Is Important
Writing that is grammatical, concise, direct, and persuasive displays the “superior control of language”(as the test makers term it) that earns top GRE Writing Assessment. To achieve effective GRE style in your essays, you should pay attention to the following points.
Grammar
Your writing must follow the rules of standard written English. If you’re not confident of your mastery of grammar, brush up before the test.
Diction
Diction means word choice. For example, do you use the words affect and effect correctly? Be careful with such commonly confused words as precede/proceed, principal/principle, whose/who’s, and stationary/stationery.
THE BASIC PRINCIPLES OF GRE WRITING
1. Use language effectively.
2. Keep it simple.
3. Don’t worry excessively about making minor errors.
4. Keep sight of your goal.
Syntax
Syntax refers to sentence structure. Do you construct your sentences so that your ideas are clear and understandable? Do you vary your sentence structure, sometimes using simple sentences and other times using sentences with clauses and phrases?
It’s Better to Keep Things Simple
Perhaps the single most important thing to bear in mind when writing GRE essays is to keep everything simple. This rule applies to word choice, sentence structure, and organization. If you obsess about how to spell an unusual word, you can lose your flow of thought. The more complicated your sentences are, the more likely it is that they will be plagued by errors. The more complex your organization gets, the more likely it is that your argument will get bogged down in convoluted sentences that obscure your point. But keep in mind that simple does not mean simplistic. A clear, straightforward approach can still be sophisticated and convey perceptive insights.
Minor Grammatical Flaws Won’t Torpedo Your Score
Many test takers mistakenly believe that they’ll lose points because of a few mechanical errors such as misplaced commas, misspellings, or other minor glitches. Occasional mistakes of this type will not dramatically affect your GRE essay score. In fact, the test makers’ description of a top-scoring essay acknowledges that there may be minor grammatical flaws. The essay graders understand that you are writing first-draft essays. They will not be looking to take points off for minor errors, provided you don’t make them consistently. However, if your essays are littered with misspellings and grammar mistakes, then the graders may conclude that you have a serious communication problem.
To write an effective essay, you must be concise, forceful, and correct. An effective essay wastes no words, makes its point in a clear, direct way, and conforms to the generally accepted rules of grammar and form.
Keep Sight of Your Goal
Remember, your goal isn’t to become a prize-winning stylist. It’s to write two solid essays that will convince admissions officers you can write well enough to clearly communicate your ideas to a reader—or academic colleague. GRE essay graders don’t expect rhetorical flourishes, but they do expect effective expression.
This chapter will give you the chance to sharpen your GRE writing skills.
THE KAPLAN FIVE-STEP METHOD FOR THE ANALYTICAL WRITING MEASURE
Here’s the deal: You have a limited amount of time to show the graduate school admissions people that you can think logically and express yourself in clearly written English. They don’t care how many syllables you can cram into a sentence or how fancy your phrases are. They care that you’re making sense. Whatever you do, don’t try to hide beneath a lot of hefty words and abstractions. Just make sure that everything you say is clearly written and relevant to the topic. Get in there, state your main points, back them up, and get out.
Digest the issue/argument
• Read it through to get a sense of the scope of the matter.
• Note any terms that are ambiguous and need defining.
• Frame the issue/argument.
Select the point you will make
• In the “Analysis of Issue” essay, think of the arguments for both sides and make a decision as to which side you will support or the exact extent to which you agree with the stated position.
• In the “Analysis of Argument” essay, identify all the important gaps between the evidence and the conclusion. Think of remedies for the problems you discover.
Organize your argument.
• Outline your essay.
• Lead with your best arguments.
• Think about how the essay as a whole will flow.
Write/type your essay
• Be direct.
• Use paragraph breaks to make your essay easier to read.
• Make transitions, link related ideas; it will help your writing flow.
• Finish strongly.
Proofread your work.
• Save enough time to read through the entire essay.
• Have a sense of the errors you are liable to make.
As explained before, the two essay types you’ll meet on the GRE, the Issue and the Argument, require generally similar tasks. You must analyze a subject, take an informed position, and explain that position in writing. The two essay types, however, require different specific tasks.
Analysis of Issue questions have two basic parts: the stimulus, and the question stem.The stimulus is the first paragraph, which outlines the issue for you to analyze; the question stem is the second paragraph, giving you instructions about your essay task.
WHAT’S YOUR JOB?
For both essay types, you must:
• Analyze a topic.
• Take a position.
• Explain your position.
The Stimulus
Expect a sentence or two that discuss a broad, general issue, sometimes presenting two competing points of view, sometimes only one. While the issue will be one upon which reasonable people could disagree, it will not bring up an emotionally charged religious or social issue. You won’t be expected to have prior knowledge of any specific subject matter.
The first sentence or two will introduce the general issue itself and express a point of view. If two viewpoints are expressed, sometimes a Keyword—such as but, however, yet—will signal the introduction of a contrasting point of view; sometimes, as in the statement above, this transition won’t be quite as explicit. The last part of the stimulus will then discuss the opposing view on the issue. If only one viewpoint is discussed, there will be terms in the opinion as stated that make it extreme or overly broad. There may also be an additional statement that elaborates on it more fully.
The Question Stem
The stem will ask you to take a position on the issue and will instruct you to explain your position convincingly, using reasons or examples to back up your assertions.
The directions for the issue essay will be something similar to this:
Directions: You will have 45 minutes to plan and write an essay that communicates your perspective on a given topic. Choose from the two topics provided. No other topics are admissible for this essay.
The topic is a short quotation that expresses an issue of general interest. Write an essay that agrees with, refutes, or qualifies the quotation, and support your opinion with relevant information drawn from your academic studies, reading, observation, or other experiences.
Feel free to consider the issue for a few minutes before planning your response and beginning your writing. Be certain that your ideas are fully developed and organized logically, and make sure you have enough time left to review and revise what you’ve written.
The topic could take the form of a single-sentence quotation or it might be in paragraph form. Either way, it will state an argument for which one or more counterarguments could be constructed. In short, the topic will present a point of view. Your job is to form an opinion on the topic and make a case for that opinion.
The topics you see in the Issue section might be similar to these:
The invention of gunpowder is the single most destructive achievement in history.
If extraterrestrial beings whose intelligence was comparable to humans’ visited Earth, they would judge humans by their potential and achievements rather than by their weaknesses and mistakes.
The drawbacks to the use of nuclear power mean that it is not a long-term solution to the problem of meeting ever-increasing energy needs.
TIP! WRITING AN EFFECTIVE ISSUE ESSAY
An effective Issue Essay takes a stand, supports it with relevant personal insight, and presents it coherently.Take a few minutes to consider your topic and develop arguments for and against its position. Then decide which side you want to take.
Applying the Kaplan Five-Step Method to the Issue Essay
Let’s use the Kaplan Five-Step method on one of the sample issue topics we saw before:
The drawbacks to the use of nuclear power mean that it is not a long-term solution to the problem of meeting ever-increasing energy needs.
THE KAPLAN METHOD FOR THE WRITING ASSESSMENT
1. Digest the issue.
2. Select a position.
3. Organize your argument.
4. Compose your essay.
5. Proofread your work.
Digest the issue
It’s simple enough. The person who wrote this believes that nuclear power is not a suitable replacement for other forms of energy.
Select the point you will make
Your job, as stated in the directions, is to decide whether or not you agree and explain your decision.Some would argue that the use of nuclear power is too dangerous, while others would say that we can’t afford not to use it. So which side do you take? Remember, this isn’t about showing the admissions people what your deep-seated beliefs about the environment are—it’s about showing that you can formulate an argument and write it down. Quickly think through the pros and cons of each side, and choose the side for which you have the most relevant things to say. For this topic, that process might go something like this:
Arguments for the use of nuclear power:
• Inexpensive compared to other forms of energy
• Fossil fuels will eventually be depleted
• Solar power still too problematic and expensive
Arguments against the use of nuclear power:
• Radioactive byproducts are deadly.
• Safer alternatives like nuclear fusion may be viable in the future
• Solar power already in use
Again, it doesn’t matter which side you take. Let’s say that in this case you decide to argue against nuclear power. Remember, the question is asking you to argue why the cons of nuclear power outweigh the pros—the inadequacy of this power source is the end you’re arguing toward, so don’t list it as a supporting argument.
Organize your argument.
You’ve already begun to think out your arguments—that’s why you picked the side you did in the first place. Now’s the time to write them all out, including ones that weaken the opposing side.
Nuclear power is not a viable alternative to other sources of energy because:
• Radioactive, spent fuel has leaked from storage sites (too dangerous)
• Reactor accidents can be catastrophic—Three Mile Island, Chernobyl (too dangerous)
• More research into solar power will bring down its cost (weakens opposing argument)
• Solar-powered homes and cars already exist (alternatives proven viable)
• No serious effort to research other alternatives like nuclear fusion (better alternatives lie undiscovered)
• Energy companies don’t spend money on alternatives; no vested interest (better alternatives lie undiscovered)
Compose your essay
Remember, open up with a general statement and then assert your position. From there, get down your main points. Your essay for this assignment might look like the following:
Sample Essay 1
At first glance, nuclear energy may seem to be the power source for the future. It’s relatively inexpensive, it doesn’t produce smoke, and its fuel supply is virtually inexhaustible. But a close examination of the issue reveals that nuclear energy is more problematic and dangerous than other forms of energy production.
A main reason that nuclear energy is undesirable is the problem of radioactive waste storage.Highly toxic fuel left over from nuclear fission remains toxic for thousands of years, and the spills and leaks from existing storage sites are hazardous and costly to clean up. Even more appalling is the prospect of accidents at the reactor itself: Incidents at the Three Mile Island and Chernobyl power plants have proven that the consequences of a nuclear meltdown can be catastrophic and have consequences that are felt worldwide.
Environmental and health problems aside, the bottom line for the production of energy is profit.Nuclear power is a business just like any other, and the large companies that produce this country’s electricity and gas claim they can’t make alternatives like solar power affordable. Yet—largely due to incentives from the federal government—there exist today homes that are heated by solar power, and cars that are fueled by the sun have already hit the streets. If the limited resources that have been devoted to energy alternatives have already produced working models, a more intensive effort is likely to make those alternatives less expensive and problematic.
Options like solar power, hydroelectric power, and nuclear fusion are far better in the long run in terms of cost and safety. The only money required for these alternatives is for the materials required to harvest them: Sunlight, water, and the power of the atom are free. They also don’t produce any toxic byproducts for which long-term storage—a hidden cost of nuclear power—must be found. And, with the temporary exception of nuclear fusion, these sources of energy are already being harnessed today.
While there are arguments to be made for both sides, it is clear that the drawbacks to the use of nuclear power are too great. If other alternatives are explored more seriously than they have been in the past, safer and less expensive sources of power will undoubtedly prove to be better alternatives.
Proofread your work
Take that last couple of minutes to catch any glaring errors.
Analysis of Argument question stems are just a variation on the same theme: stimulus and question stem. Same basic idea as in Analysis of Issue questions—the stimulus provides information and the question stem tells you how to analyze this information.
The Stimulus
This time you’re given an expressed point of view—an “argument”—that contains a conclusion and supporting evidence. Here the writer tries to persuade you of something—her conclusion—by citing some evidence. You should read the “arguments” in Analysis of Argument questions with a critical eye; be on the lookout for assumptions—the way the writer moves from evidence to conclusion.
The Question Stem
Question stems will require you to decide how convincing you find the argument. To make your case, first analyze the argument itself and evaluate its use of evidence; second, explain how a different approach or more information would make the argument itself better (or possibly worse). Now let’s look at how you might approach the other type of essay topic, the Argument. The directions for this section will probably look something like this:
Directions: You will have 30 minutes to plan and write a critique of an argument presented in the form of a short passage. You will be asked to consider the logical soundness of the argument by:
• Identifying and analyzing the argument’s important points
• Organizing, developing, and expressing your ideas
• Supporting your ideas with relevant reasons and/or examples
• Demonstrating a knowledge of standard written English
Feel free to consider the issue for a few minutes before planning your response and beginning your writing. Be certain that your ideas are fully developed and organized logically, and make sure you have enough time left to review and revise what you’ve written.
TIP! WRITING AN EFFECTIVE ARGUMENT ESSAY
In Argument Essays, the author has already drawn a conclusion; you need to determine the validity or inadequacy of his or her reasoning.An effective Argument Essay assesses the conclusion and evidence in the argument, analyzing if for flaws and proposing improvements.And remember, there is no “right”answer. You can take either side in an Argument Essay—just analyze it well.
The author of an argument topic is trying to persuade you of something—his conclusion—by citing some evidence. So look for these two basic components of an argument: a conclusion and supporting evidence. You should be on the lookout for assumptions—the ways the writer makes the leap from evidence to conclusion.
The topics you see in the Argument section may be similar to these:
The problem of poorly trained teachers that has plagued the state public school system is bound to become a good deal less serious in the future. The state has initiated comprehensive guidelines that oblige state teachers to complete a number of required credits in education and educational psychology at the graduate level before being certified.
The commercial airline industry in the country of Freedonia has experienced impressive growth in the past three years. This trend will surely continue in the years to come, since the airline industry will benefit from recent changes in Freedonian society: Incomes are rising, most employees now receive more vacation time, and interest in travel is rising, as shown by an increase in media attention devoted to foreign cultures and tourist attractions.
Insurance policies guaranteeing the policyholder’s income if he or she becomes permanently disabled will surely provide the insurance industry with a popular and profitable product. The cost to a worker who is at average risk is very little, and the benefits paid to the disabled far outweigh this cost.
Applying the Kaplan Five-Step Method to an Argument Essay
Let’s use the Kaplan Five-Step Method on the Analysis of an Argument topic we saw before:
The problem of poorly trained teachers that has plagued the state public school system is bound to become a good deal less serious in the future. The state has initiated comprehensive guidelines that oblige state teachers to complete a number of required credits in education and educational psychology at the graduate level before being certified.
Explain how logically persuasive you find this argument. In discussing your viewpoint, analyze the argument’s line of reasoning and its use of evidence. Also explain what, if anything, would make the argument more valid and convincing or help you to better evaluate its conclusion.
Digest the argument
First, identify the conclusion—the point the argument’s trying to make. Here, the conclusion is:
The problem of poorly trained teachers that has plagued the state public school system is bound to become a good deal less serious in the future.
KEY POINT
In attacking the argument, remember to:
• Jot down the conclusion
• Identify the evidence
• Sum up the essential argument in your own words
Next, identify the evidence—the basis for the conclusion. Here, the evidence is:
The state has initiated comprehensive guidelines that oblige state teachers to complete a number of required credits in education and educational psychology at the graduate level before being certified.
Finally, sum up the argument in your own words:
The problem of badly trained teachers will become less serious because they’ll be getting better training.
Explain how logically persuasive you find this argument. In explaining your viewpoint, analyze the argument’s line of reasoning and its use of evidence. Also explain what, if anything, would make the argument more valid and convincing or would help you to better evaluate its conclusion.
• Credits in education will improve teachers’ classroom performance.
• Present bad teachers haven’t already met this standard of training.
• Current poor teachers will not still be teaching in the future, or will have to be trained, too.
Select the point you will make
Analyze the use of evidence in the argument.
Determine whether there’s anything relevant that’s not discussed:
• Whether the training will actually address the cause of the problems
• How to either improve or remove the poor teachers now teaching
Also determine what types of evidence would make the argument stronger or more logically sound. In this case, we need some new evidence supporting the assumptions:
• Evidence verifying that this training will make better teachers.
• Evidence making it clear that present bad teachers haven’t already had this training.
• Evidence suggesting why all or many bad teachers won’t still be teaching in the future (or why they’ll be better trained).
WRITE ON!
In writing your essay, cover each point in your outline and employ the four basic principles of GRE writing.
Organise your Argument
For an essay on this topic, your opening sentence might look like this:
The writer concludes that the present problem of poorly trained teachers will become less severe in the future because of required course work in education and psychology.
Then use your notes as a working outline. Remember to lead with your best arguments. You might also recommend new evidence you’d like to see and explain why.
ESSAY STRUCTURE
A two-paragraph essay may be the most natural format for your response. However, consider using a third or fourth if you wish to discuss a number of different features of an argument.
The argument says that:
The problem of poorly trained teachers will become less serious with better training.
It assumes that:
• Course work in education will improve teachers’ classroom performance.
• Present bad teachers haven’t already met this standard of classroom training.
• Current poor teachers will not be teaching in the future or will get training, too.
Compose your essay
Begin typing or writing your essay now. Keep in mind the basic principles of writing that we discussed earlier. And remember the following issues:
What assumptions are made by the author?
• Are these assumptions valid? Why or why not?
• What additional information or evidence would make the argument stronger?
Your essay might look something like this:
Sample Essay 2
The writer concludes that the present problem of poorly trained teachers will become less severe in the future because of required credits in education and psychology. However, the conclusion relies on assumptions for which there is no clear evidence.
First, the writer assumes that the required courses will make better teachers. In fact, the courses might be entirely irrelevant to the teachers’ failings. If, for example, the prevalent problem is cultural and linguistic gaps between teacher and student, graduate-level courses that do not address these specific issues probably won’t do much good. The argument that the courses will improve teachers would be strengthened if the writer provided evidence that the training will be relevant to the problems.
In addition, the writer assumes that current poor teachers have not already had this training. In fact, the writer doesn’t mention whether or not some or all of the poor teachers have had similar training. The argument would be strengthened considerably if the writer provided evidence that current poor teachers have not had training comparable to the new requirements.
Finally, the writer assumes that poor teachers currently working will either stop teaching in the future or will have received training. The writer provides no evidence, though, to indicate that this is the case. As the argument stands, it’s highly possible that only brand-new teachers will receive the training, and the bright future to which the writer refers is decades away. Only if the writer provides evidence that all teachers in the system will receive training—and will then change their teaching methods accordingly—does the argument hold.
Proofhead your work
Save a few minutes to go back over your essay and catch any obvious errors.
Directions: Write an essay on each of the topics below. While writing, pay particular attention to making your essay concise, forceful, and grammatically correct. After you’ve finished with each essay, proofread to catch your errors. Allow yourself 45 minutes to complete the first essay and 30 minutes to complete the second essay.
Essay Topic 1: Issue
Some people believe that second-language fluency is crucial to individual development and international accord, and maintain that language training should begin very early. Others feel that second-language fluency is not necessary to most Americans, and that elementary school should be devoted to basic skills.
Which argument do you find more compelling, the case for early foreign language learning or the opposing viewpoint? Explain your position using relevant reasons or examples drawn from your own experience, observations, or reading.
Essay Topic 2: Argument
Many lives might be saved if inoculations against cow flu were routinely administered to all people in areas in which the disease is detected. However, since there is a small possibility that a person will die as a result of the inoculations, we cannot permit inoculations against cow flu to be routinely administered.
Explain how logically persuasive you find this argument. In discussing your viewpoint, analyze the argument’s line of reasoning and its use of evidence. Also explain what, if anything, would make the argument more valid or convincing or help you to better evaluate its conclusion.
GRE ANALYTICAL WRITING SCORING
Holistic scoring uses a single letter or a number—on the GRE it’s a number—to provide an overall evaluation of an essay as a whole. A holistic score emphasizes the interrelation of different thinking and writing qualities in an essay (such as content, organization, or syntax) and tries to denote the unified effect that all of these elements combine to produce. Although the GRE writing tests consist of two different essays, a single combined score is reported, representing the average of your scores for the two essays.
Each of the two essay tasks requires a different type of response and so has a slightly different set of grading criteria. But both kinds of topic require similar essay qualities. The list below, based on information from the Graduate Record Examinations Board, will give you a general idea of the guidelines a GRE grader will have in mind when reading your essays.
6: “Outstanding” Essay
• Insightfully presents and convincingly supports an opinion on the issue or a critique of the argument.
• Ideas are very clear, well organized and logically connected.
• Shows superior control of language: grammar, stylistic variety, and accepted conventions of writing; minor flaws may occur.
5: “Strong” Essay
• Presents well-chosen examples and strongly supports an opinion on the issue or a critique of the argument.
• Ideas are generally clear and well organized; connections are logical.
• Shows solid control of language: grammar, stylistic variety, and accepted conventions of writing; minor flaws may occur.
4: “Adequate” Essay
• Presents and adequately supports an opinion on the issue or a critique of the argument.
• Ideas are fairly clear and adequately organized; logical connections are satisfactory.
• Shows satisfactory control of language: grammar, stylistic variety, and accepted conventions of writing; some flaws may occur.
3: “Limited” Essay
• Succeeds only partially in presenting and supporting an opinion on the issue or a critique of the argument.
• Ideas may be unclear and poorly organized.
• Shows less than satisfactory control of language: contains significant mistakes in grammar,usage, and sentence structure.
2: “Weak” Essay
• Shows little success in presenting and supporting an opinion on the issue or a critique of the argument.
• Ideas lack clarity and organization.
• Meaning is impeded by many serious mistakes in grammar, usage, and sentence structure.
1: “Fundamentally Deficient” Essay
• Fails to present a coherent opinion and/or evidence on the issue or a critique of the argument.
• Ideas are seriously unclear and disorganized.
• Lacks meaning due to widespread severe mistakes in grammar, usage, and sentence structure.
0: “Unscorable” Essay
• Completely ignores topic.
You Be the Evaluator
You’ve now seen what both essay topic types look like, and you know more about the criteria used to evaluate essays. With this information in mind, review your own practice essays and see how you think they measure up.
For this exercise, it’s not critical that you assign the “right” grade. It’s more important that you understand whether the essays are well written and how well they fulfill the required tasks.
Be Concise
• Cut out words, phrases, and sentences that do not add any information or serve a purpose.
• Watch out for repetitive phrases such as refer back or serious crisis.
• Don’t use conjunctions to join sentences that would be more effective as separate sentences.
Be Forceful
• Avoid jargon and pompous language; it won’t impress anybody.
• Avoid clichés and overused terms or phrases. (For example, beyond the shadow of a doubt. )
• Don’t be vague. Avoid generalizations and abstractions when more specific words would be clearer. (For example, write a waste of time and money instead of pointless temporal and financial expenditure .)
• Don’t use weak sentence openings. Avoid beginning a sentence with “There is” or “There are.”
• Don’t refer to yourself needlessly. Avoid pointless phrases like in my personal opinion.
• Don’t be monotonous: Vary sentence length and style.
• Use transitions to connect sentences and make your essay easy to follow. Paragraphs should clarify the different parts of your essay.
Be Correct
• Stick to the rules of standard written English.
Chapter 7: Increasing Your GRE Vocabulary
A strong vocabulary is the greatest asset that you can bring to the GRE Verbal Section. Antonyms, which make up a quarter of the Verbal Section, are a direct test of your vocabulary skills. The other types of short Verbal questions (Analogies and Sentence Completions) also require you to understand the meanings of a large number of words.
So, how do you start improving your vocabulary? Don’t say to yourself, “I’m going to get ready for the GRE by opening the dictionary and starting on page 1.” In real life, the dictionary is the single most useful verbal tool there is. But the GRE is not real life, and for the purposes of preparing for the GRE, the dictionary is overkill. It includes a lot more words than you need to look at, including all those everyday words you already know and all those esoteric words that will never appear on the GRE.
TIP! SIGN UP FOR FREE “WORD OF THE DAY” EMAILS
As you study for the GRE, consider signing up for a free “Word of the Day” email service, such as those offered by dictionary.com, the Oxford English Dictionary (oed.com), or the New York Times (nytimes.com). They send a high-level vocabulary word with its definition, a context sentence, and its etymology to your inbox daily.
Building up a good vocabulary takes time, a lifetime for most people. However, you can increase your GRE vocabulary quickly. There are a couple of reasons for this:
1. The GRE tests the same words over and over again.
If you know the words that the GRE loves, you have a big head start in increasing your GRE vocabulary. We have included the words that appear most often on the GRE in chapter 8, “Top GRE Words.” Start learning the meanings of these words as soon as you can.
2. The GRE does not test the exact definitions of words. If you have some idea of what the word means, you can usually get to the answer.
You don’t need to know the exact definitions of words to get a good verbal score on the GRE. It’s better to know something about ten words than everything about one word. This is why learning words in groups is such a powerful technique. We have included common word groups for the GRE in chapter 9, “GRE Word Groups.”
Knowing the meanings of common word roots can be helpful in two ways. First, knowing the meaning of word roots can help you guess at the meanings of unfamiliar words you encounter on the GRE. Second, when you’re learning new vocabulary, it’s more effective to study words in groups rather than one by one. Learning groups of words that are related by a common root will help you to learn more words faster. We have included a list of common GRE word roots in chapter 10.
Once you’ve looked over the top GRE words and the chapters on word roots and word groups, you can hone your skills using our opposite drills in chapter 11. Finally, chapter 12 includes a minidictionary that gives you the definitions of thousands of GRE words. Use it whenever you encounter an unfamiliar word in your study.
The way most people build their vocabulary is by reading words in context. Reading is ultimately the best way to increase your vocabulary, although it also takes the most time. Of course, some types of reading material contain more GRE vocabulary words than others. You should get into the habit of reading high-level publications, such as the Wall Street Journal, the Economist, and the New York Times. (Because you’ll have to read from the computer screen on Test Day, we recommend that you read these publications online, if possible. And if you read lengthy articles that require scrolling through, so much the better.)
When you come across words you don’t know and can’t figure out from the context, look them up in the dictionary and make a note of them. It sounds tedious, but it’s definitely worth the time and effort come Test Day. The words you encounter during your prep can be found in the GRE Minidictionary in chapter 12. This handy reference tool contains thousands of words that you might find on the GRE.
TIP! READ THE NEWSPAPER DAILY
Read the newspaper daily, concentrating on articles covering topics with which you are unfamiliar.Jot down each article’s main idea and the author’s tone and purpose. This way, you can practice overcoming the hurdle of reading unfamiliar or difficult material.
Note that you will find nothing on pronunciation in the minidictionary. Pronunciation is not tested on the GRE, so we don’t recommend spending study time learning how to pronounce words. Some people, however, find it much easier to remember the meaning of a word if they have the sound of the word in their heads. If you’re such a person, then use the dictionary to figure out how to pronounce words you’re not familiar with.
The GRE never directly tests your ability to classify words by part of speech, but you’ll do better if you can distinguish nouns, adjectives, and verbs.
Nouns
A noun names a person, place, or thing. A noun answers the questions “who,” “where,” or “what.” A noun can function as the subject (“The soliloquy was eloquent”) or object of a verb (“He wrote an eloquent soliloquy”).
If you know the meaning of the word, you can tell if it’s a noun by thinking about the way it would be used in a sentence:
• If the word can function as the subject of a sentence, it’s a noun.
• If it can be replaced by a pronoun like he, she, it, or they, it’s a noun.
• If you can put an article like the, a, an, or some in front of it, it’s a noun.
• If it has a plural form (usually the ending -s ), it’s a noun. If it has a possessive form (usually the ending -’s), it’s a noun.
• If you don’t know the meaning of a word, but it has one of the following suffixes, then it’s probably a noun:
Adjectives
An adjective describes a noun, answering the questions “what kind,” “which one,” or “how many.” In a sentence, you will generally find adjectives right in front of the nouns they describe (“The book is full of sophomoric humor”) or after a form of the verb be or some other linking verb (“The book’s humor is sophomoric”).
If you know the meaning of a word, you can tell if it’s an adjective by thinking about the way the word would be used in a sentence. If the word can be used to describe a noun, it’s an adjective. Most adjectives have comparative and superlative forms (rife, rifer, rifest and sanguine, more sanguine, most sanguine). Most adjectives can be turned into adverbs by adding -ly (intemperately).
If you don’t know the meaning of a word, but it has one of the following suffixes, then it’s probably an adjective:
Verbs
A verb is a word that represents an action or state of being. Every sentence must have at least one verb. The main verb usually comes right after the subject (“They squander their fortunes”), but sometimes is separated from the subject (“The contestant with the second highest vote total wins the consolation prize”) and sometimes even precedes the subject (“Quickly flow the years. ”). If you know the meaning of the word, you can tell if it’s a verb by thinking about the way the word would be used in a sentence. If, with the addition of an -s, it can follow a pronoun like he or it and make a sentence, it’s a verb (“He panders”). If it has a past form ending in -ed (pandered) and a progressive form ending in -ing (pandering), it’s a verb.
If you don’t know the meaning of a word, but it has one of the following suffixes, then it’s probably a verb:
Split-Personality Words
Remember that many words in the English language can function as more than one part of speech.Here’s a single word used as a noun, adjective, and verb:
As the test tube rested overnight, some precipitate formed. (noun)
It would be better to proceed with caution than to take precipitate action. (adjective)
Passage of the resolution could well precipitate rebellion. (verb)
When you see a word all by itself in an analogy or an antonym, with no sentence to show you the word in use, you may not be able to tell at first what part of speech it is. For example, if you see the word brook out of context, don’t assume you’re looking at a noun. It can also be a verb, as in: “She would brook no interference with her intentions.” Instead, look at the answer choices or the other word in an analogy’s stem. They should make it pretty clear what meaning they are testing.
Some words appear on the GRE more than others. The following words all turn up regularly on the test, although some turn up more than others. You should start by learning these words, and the groups of words that have similar meanings to them.
The top 12 words on the GRE are:
The next 20 most popular words are:
The next 20 most popular words after these are:
ABATE: to reduce in amount, degree, or severity
As the hurricane’s force ABATED, the winds dropped and the sea became calm.
Words with similar meanings:
ABSCOND: to leave secretly
The patron ABSCONDED from the restaurant without paying his bill by sneaking out the back door.
Words with similar meanings:
DECAMP ESCAPE FLEE
ABSTAIN: to choose not to do something
During Lent, practicing Catholics ABSTAIN from eating meat.
Words with similar meanings:
FORBEAR REFRAIN WITHHOLD
ABYSS: an extremely deep hole
The submarine dove into the ABYSS to chart the previously unseen depths.
Related words:
ABYSSAL: pertaining to great depth
ABYSMAL: extremely bad
Words with similar meanings:
CHASM VOID
ADULTERATE: to make impure
The restaurateur made his ketchup last longer by ADULTERATING it with water.
Related words:
UNADULTERATED: pure
ADULTERY: an illicit relationship; an affair
Words with similar meanings:
DOCTOR
ADVOCATE: to speak in favor of
The vegetarian ADVOCATED a diet containing no meat.
Related words:
ADVOCACY: active support for
Words with similar meanings:
BACK CHAMPION SUPPORT
AESTHETIC: concerning the appreciation of beauty
Followers of the AESTHETIC Movement regarded the pursuit of beauty as the only true purpose of art.
Related words:
AESTHETE: someone unusually sensitive to beauty
AESTHETICISM: concern with beauty
Words with similar meanings:
ARTISTIC TASTEFUL
AGGRANDIZE: to increase in power, influence, and reputation
The supervisor sought to AGGRANDIZE himself by claiming that the achievements of his staff were
actually his own.
Words with similar meanings:
ALLEVIATE: to make more bearable:
Taking aspirin helps to ALLEVIATE a headache.
Words with similar meanings:
AMALGAMATE: to combine; to mix together
Giant Industries AMALGAMATED with Mega Products to form Giant-Mega Products Incorporated.
Related words:
AMALGAM: a mixture, especially of two metals
Words with similar meanings:
AMBIGUOUS: doubtful or uncertain; able to be interpreted several ways
The directions he gave were so AMBIGUOUS that we disagreed on which way to turn.
Related words:
AMBIGUITY: the quality of being ambiguous
Words with similar meanings:
AMELIORATE: to make better; to improve
The doctor was able to AMELIORATE the patient’s suffering using painkillers.
Words with similar meanings:
ANACHRONISM: something out of place in time
The aged hippie used ANACHRONISTIC phrases like groovy and far out that had not been popular for years.
Words with similar meanings:
ARCHAISM INCONGRUITY
ANALOGOUS: similar or alike in some way; equivalent to
In a famous argument for the existence of God, the universe is ANALOGOUS to a mechanical timepiece, the creation of a divinely intelligent “clockmaker.”
Related words:
ANALOGY: a similarity between things that are otherwise dissimilar ANALOGUE: something that is similar in some way to something else
Words with similar meanings:
ANOMALY: deviation from what is normal
Albino animals may display too great an ANOMALY in their coloring to attract normally colored mates.
Related words:
ANOMALOUS: deviating from what is normal
Words with similar meanings:
ANTAGONIZE: to annoy or provoke to anger The child discovered that he could ANTAGONIZE the cat by pulling its tail.
Related words:
ANTAGONISTIC: tending to provoke conflict ANTAGONIST: someone who fights another
Words with similar meanings
ANTIPATHY: extreme dislike
The ANTIPATHY between the French and the English regularly erupted into open warfare.
Words with similar meanings:
APATHY: lack of interest or emotion
The APATHY of voters is so great that less than half the people who are eligible to vote actually bother to do so.
Words with similar meanings:
ARBITRATE: to judge a dispute between two opposing parties Since the couple could not come to agreement, a judge was forced to ARBITRATE their divorce proceedings.
Related words:
ARBITRATION: a process by which a conflict is resolved
ARBITRATOR: a judge
Words with similar meanings:
ARCHAIC: ancient, old-fashioned
Her ARCHAIC Commodore computer could not run the latest software.
Related words:
ARCHAISM: an outdated word or phrase
Words with similar meanings:
ARDOR: intense and passionate feeling
Bishop’s ARDOR for landscape was evident when he passionately described the beauty of the scenic Hudson Valley.
Related words:
ARDENT: expressing ardor; passionate
Words with similar meanings:
ARTICULATE: able to speak clearly and expressively
She is such an ARTICULATE defender of labor that unions are among her strongest supporters.
Words with similar meanings
ELOQUENT EXPRESSIVE FLUENT
LUCID SILVER-TONGUED SMOOTH-SPOKEN
ASSUAGE: to make something unpleasant less severe
Like many people, Philip Larkin used alcohol to ASSUAGE his sense of meaninglessness and despair.
Words with similar meanings:
ATTENUATE: to reduce in force or degree; to weaken
The Bill of Rights ATTENUATED the traditional power of government to change laws at will.
Words with similar meanings:
AUDACIOUS: fearless and daring
“And you, your majesty, may kiss my bum!” replied the AUDACIOUS peasant.
Related words:
AUDACITY: the quality of being audacious
Words with similar meanings:
AUSTERE: severe or stern in appearance; undecorated
The lack of decoration makes Zen temples seem AUSTERE to the untrained eye.
Related words:
AUSTERITY: severity, especially poverty
Words with similar meanings:
BANAL: predictable, clichéd, boring
He used BANAL phrases like Have a nice day or Another day, another dollar.
Related words:
BANALITY: the quality of being banal
Words with similar meanings:
BOLSTER: to support; to prop up
The presence of giant footprints BOLSTERED the argument that Sasquatch was in the area.
Words with similar meanings:
BOMBASTIC: pompous in speech and manner
Mussolini’s speeches were mostly BOMBASTIC; his boasting and outrageous claims had no basis in fact.
Related words:
BOMBAST: pompous speech or writing
Words with similar meanings:
CACOPHONY: harsh, jarring noise
The junior high orchestra created an almost unbearable CACOPHONY as they tried to tune their instruments.
Words with similar meanings:
CANDID: impartial and honest in speech
The observations of a child can be charming since they are CANDID and unpretentious.
Words with similar meanings:
CAPRICIOUS: changing one’s mind quickly and often
Queen Elizabeth I was quite CAPRICIOUS; her courtiers could never be sure which of their number would catch her fancy.
Related words:
CAPRICE: whim, sudden fancy
Words with similar meanings:
CASTIGATE: to punish or criticize harshly
Americans are amazed at how harshly the authorities in Singapore CASTIGATE perpetrators of what would be considered minor crimes in the United States.
Words with similar meanings:
CATALYST: something that brings about a change in something else
The imposition of harsh taxes was the CATALYST that finally brought on the revolution.
Related words:
CATALYZE: to bring about a change in something else
CAUSTIC: biting in wit
Dorothy Parker gained her reputation for CAUSTIC wit from her cutting, yet clever, insults.
Words with similar meanings:
ACERBIC BITING MORDANT
TRENCHANT
CHAOS: great disorder or confusion
In most religious traditions, God created an ordered universe from CHAOS.
Related words:
CHAOTIC: jumbled, confused
Words with similar meanings:
CHAUVINIST: someone prejudiced in favor of a group to which he or she belongs
The attitude that men are inherently superior to women and therefore must be obeyed is common among male CHAUVINISTS.
Words with similar meanings:
PARTISAN
CHICANERY: deception by means of craft or guile
Dishonest used car salesmen often use CHICANERY to sell their beat-up old cars.
Words with similar meanings:
COGENT: convincing and well reasoned
Swayed by the COGENT argument of the defense, the jury had no choice but to acquit the defendant.
Related words:
COGITATE: to think deeply
Words with similar meanings:
CONDONE: to overlook, pardon, or disregard
Some theorists believe that failing to prosecute minor crimes is the same as CONDONING an air of lawlessness.
Words with similar meanings:
EXCULPATE EXCUSE PARDON
REMIT
CONVOLUTED: intricate and complicated
Although many people bought A Brief History of Time, few could follow its CONVOLUTED ideas and theories.
Words with similar meanings:
CORROBORATE: to provide supporting evidence
Fingerprints CORROBORATED the witness’s testimony that he saw the defendant in the victim’s apartment.
Words with similar meanings:
CREDULOUS: too trusting; gullible
Although some 4-year-olds believe in the Easter Bunny, only the most CREDULOUS 9-year-olds also believe in him.
Related words:
CREDULITY: the quality of being credulous
Words with similar meanings:
NAIVE SUSCEPTIBLE TRUSTING
CRESCENDO: steadily increasing volume or force
The CRESCENDO of tension became unbearable as Evel Knievel prepared to jump his motorcycle over the school buses.
DECORUM: appropriateness of behavior or conduct; propriety The countess complained that the vulgar peasants lacked the DECORUM appropriate for a visit to the palace.
Related words:
DECOROUS: conforming to acceptable standards
Words with similar meanings:
DEFERENCE: respect, courtesy
The respectful young law clerk treated the Supreme Court justice with the utmost DEFERENCE.
Related words:
DEFER: to delay; to show someone deference
DEFERENT: courteous and respectful
Words with similar meanings:
DERIDE: to speak of or treat with contempt; to mock
The awkward child was often DERIDED by his “cooler” peers.
Related words:
DERISION: mockery and taunts
DERISIVE: in a mocking manner
Words with similar meanings:
DESICCATE: to dry out thoroughly
After a few weeks of lying on the desert’s baking sands, the cow’s carcass became completely DESICCATED.
Related words:
DESICCANT: something that removes water from another substance
Words with similar meanings:
DRY PARCH DEHYDRATE
DESULTORY: jumping from one thing to another; disconnected
Diane had a DESULTORY academic record; she had changed majors 12 times in 3 years.
Words with similar meanings:
DIATRIBE: an abusive, condemnatory speech
The trucker bellowed a DIATRIBE at the driver who had cut him off.
Words with similar meanings:
DIFFIDENT: lacking self-confidence
Steve’s DIFFIDENT manner during the job interview stemmed from his nervous nature and lack of experience in the field.
Words with similar meanings:
DILATE: to make larger; to expand
When you enter a darkened room, the pupils of your eyes DILATE to let in more light.
Words with similar meanings:
DILATORY: intended to delay
The congressman used DILATORY measures to delay the passage of the bill.
Words with similar meanings:
DILETTANTE: someone with an amateurish and superficial interest in a topic
Jerry’s friends were such DILETTANTES that they seemed to have new jobs and hobbies every week.
Words with similar meanings:
DIRGE: a funeral hymn or mournful speech
Melville wrote the poem A DIRGE for James McPherson for the funeral of a Union general who was killed in 1864.
Words with similar meanings:
ELEGY LAMENT
DISABUSE: to set right; to free from error
Galileo’s observations DISABUSED scholars of the notion that the Sun revolved around the Earth.
Words with similar meanings:
CORRECT UNDECEIVE
DISCERN: to perceive; to recognize
It is easy to DISCERN the difference between butter and butter-flavored topping.
Related words:
DISCERNMENT: taste and cultivation
Words with similar meanings:
DISPARATE: fundamentally different; entirely unlike
Although the twins appear to be identical physically, their personalities are DISPARATE.
Words with similar meanings:
DISSEMBLE: to present a false appearance; to disguise one’s real intentions or character
The villain could DISSEMBLE to the police no longer—he admitted the deed and tore up the floor to reveal the body of the old man.
Words with similar meanings:
DISSONANCE: a harsh and disagreeable combination, often of sounds
Cognitive DISSONANCE is the inner conflict produced when long-standing beliefs are contradicted by new evidence.
Words with similar meanings:
DOGMA: a firmly held opinion, often a religious belief
Linus’ central DOGMA was that children who believed in the Great Pumpkin would be rewarded.
Words with similar meanings:
DOGMATIC: dictatorial in one’s opinions
The dictator was DOGMATIC—he, and only he, was right.
Words with similar meanings:
DUPE: to deceive; a person who is easily deceived
Bugs Bunny was able to DUPE Elmer Fudd by dressing up as a lady rabbit.
Words with similar meanings:
ECLECTIC: selecting from or made up from a variety of sources
Budapest’s architecture is an ECLECTIC mix of eastern and western styles.
Words with similar meanings:
SELECTIVE CATHOLIC BROAD
EFFICACY: effectiveness
The EFFICACY of penicillin was unsurpassed when it was first introduced; the drug completely eliminated almost all bacterial infections for which it was administered.
Related words:
EFFICACIOUS: effective; productive
Words with similar meanings:
ELEGY: a sorrowful poem or speech
Although Thomas Gray’s “ELEGY Written in a Country Churchyard” is about death and loss, it urges its readers to endure this life, and to trust in spirituality.
Related words:
ELEGIAC: like an elegy; mournful
Words with similar meanings:
DIRGE LAMENT
ELOQUENT: persuasive and moving, especially in speech
The Gettysburg Address is moving not only because of its lofty sentiments but also because of its ELOQUENT words.
Words with similar meanings:
EMULATE: to copy; to try to equal or excel
The graduate student sought to EMULATE his professor in every way, copying not only how she taught, but also how she conducted herself outside of class.
Words with similar meanings:
APE IMITATE SIMULATE
ENERVATE: to reduce in strength
The guerrillas hoped that a series of surprise attacks would ENERVATE the regular army.
Related words:
UNNERVE: to deprive of strength or courage
Words with similar meanings:
ENGENDER: to produce, cause, or bring about
His fear and hatred of clowns was ENGENDERED when he witnessed the death of his father at the hands of a clown.
Words with similar meanings:
ENIGMA: a puzzle; a mystery
Speaking in riddles and dressed in old robes, the artist gained a reputation as something of an ENIGMA.
Words with similar meanings:
CONUNDRUM PERPLEXITY
ENUMERATE: to count, list, or itemize
Moses returned from the mountain with tablets on which the commandments were ENUMERATED.
Words with similar meanings:
CATALOG INDEX TABULATE
EPHEMERAL: lasting a short time
The lives of mayflies seem EPHEMERAL to us, since the flies’ average life span is a matter of hours.
Words with similar meanings:
EQUIVOCATE: to use expressions of double meaning in order to mislead
When faced with criticism of his policies, the politician EQUIVOCATED and left all parties thinking he agreed with them.
Related words:
EQUIVOCAL: undecided; trying to deceive EQUIVOCATION: the act or state of equivocating
Words with similar meanings:
AMBIGUOUS EVASIVE WAFFLING
ERRATIC: wandering and unpredictable
The plot seemed predictable until it suddenly took a series of ERRATIC turns that surprised the audience.
Related words:
ERRANT: straying, mistaken, roving
Words with similar meanings:
ERUDITE: learned, scholarly, bookish
The annual meeting of philosophy professors was a gathering of the most ERUDITE, well-published individuals in the field.
Related words:
ERUDITION: extensive knowledge or learning
Words with similar meanings:
SCHOLASTIC LEARNED WISE
ESOTERIC: known or understood by only a few
Only a handful of experts are knowledgeable about the ESOTERIC world of particle physics.
Words with similar meanings:
ABSTRUSE ARCANE OBSCURE
ESTIMABLE: admirable
Most people consider it ESTIMABLE that Mother Teresa spent her life helping the poor of India.
Related words:
ESTEEM: high regard
Words with similar meanings:
EULOGY: speech in praise of someone
His best friend gave the EULOGY, outlining his many achievements and talents.
Words with similar meanings:
COMMEND EXTOL LAUD
EUPHEMISM: use of an inoffensive word or phrase in place of a more distasteful one
The funeral director preferred to use the EUPHEMISM “sleeping” instead of the word “dead.”
Words with similar meanings:
CIRCUMLOCUTION WHITEWASH
EXACERBATE: to make worse
It is unwise to take aspirin to try to relieve heartburn; instead of providing relief, the drug will only EXACERBATE the problem.
Words with similar meanings:
EXCULPATE: to clear from blame; prove innocent
The adversarial legal system is intended to convict those who are guilty and to EXCULPATE those who are innocent.
Words with similar meanings:
EXIGENT: urgent; requiring immediate action
The patient was losing blood so rapidly that it was EXIGENT to stop the source of the bleeding.
Words with similar meanings:
EXONERATE: to clear of blame
The fugitive was EXONERATED when another criminal confessed to committing the crime.
Words with similar meanings:
EXPLICIT: clearly stated or shown; forthright in expression
The owners of the house left a list of EXPLICIT instructions detailing their house-sitters’ duties, including a schedule for watering the house plants.
Related words:
EXPLICABLE: capable of being explained EXPLICATE: to give a detailed explanation
Words with similar meanings:
FANATICAL: acting excessively enthusiastic; filled with extreme, unquestioned devotion
The stormtroopers were FANATICAL in their devotion to the Emperor, readily sacrificing their lives for him.
Words with similar meanings:
FAWN: to grovel
The understudy FAWNED over the director in hopes of being cast in the part on a permanent basis.
Words with similar meanings:
FERVID: intensely emotional; feverish
The fans of Maria Callas were particularly FERVID, doing anything to catch a glimpse of the great opera singer.
Related words:
FERVENT: enthusiastic FERVOR: passion
Words with similar meanings:
FLORID: excessively decorated or embellished
The palace had been decorated in an excessively FLORID style; every surface had been carved and gilded.
Words with similar meanings:
FOMENT: to arouse or incite
The protesters tried to FOMENT feeling against the war through their speeches and demonstrations.
Words with similar meanings:
FRUGALITY: a tendency to be thrifty or cheap
Scrooge McDuck’s FRUGALITY was so great that he accumulated enough wealth to fill a giant storehouse with money.
Words with similar meanings:
GARRULOUS: tending to talk a lot
The GARRULOUS parakeet distracted its owner with its continuous talking.
Words with similar meanings:
EFFUSIVE LOQUACIOUS
GREGARIOUS: outgoing, sociable
She was so GREGARIOUS that when she found herself alone she felt quite sad.
Words with similar meanings:
GUILE: deceit or trickery
Since he was not fast enough to catch the roadrunner on foot, the coyote resorted to GUILE in an effort to trap his enemy.
Related words:
GUILELESS: innocent, without trickery
Words with similar meanings:
GULLIBLE: easily deceived
The con man pretended to be a bank officer so as to fool GULLIBLE bank customers into giving him their account information.
Related words:
GULL: a person who is easily tricked
Words with similar meanings:
CREDULOUS EXPLOITABLE NAIVE
HOMOGENOUS: of a similar kind
The class was fairly HOMOGENOUS, since almost all of the students were senior journalism majors.
Related words:
HOMOGENIZED: thoroughly mixed together
Words with similar meanings:
ICONOCLAST: one who opposes established beliefs, customs, and institutions
His lack of regard for traditional beliefs soon established him as an ICONOCLAST.
Words with similar meanings:
MAVERICK NONCONFORMIST REBEL
REVOLUTIONARY
IMPERTURBABLE: not capable of being disturbed
The counselor had so much experience dealing with distraught children that she seemed IMPERTURBABLE, even when faced with the wildest tantrums.
Related words:
PERTURB: to disturb greatly
Words with similar meanings:
IMPERVIOUS: impossible to penetrate; incapable of being affected A good raincoat will be IMPERVIOUS to moisture.
Words with similar meanings:
RESISTANT IMPREGNABLE
IMPETUOUS: quick to act without thinking
It is not good for an investment broker to be IMPETUOUS, since much thought should be given to all the possible options.
Related words:
IMPETUS: impulse
Words with similar meanings:
IMPLACABLE: unable to be calmed down or made peaceful
His rage at the betrayal was so great that he remained IMPLACABLE for weeks.
Related words:
PLACATE: to make peaceful
Words with similar meanings:
INCHOATE: not fully formed; disorganized
The ideas expressed in Nietzsche’s mature work also appear in an INCHOATE form in his earliest writing.
Words with similar meanings:
INGENUOUS: showing innocence or childlike simplicity
She was so INGENUOUS that her friends feared that her innocence and trustfulness would be exploited when she visited the big city.
Related words:
INGÉNUE: a naive girl or young woman
DISINGENUOUS: giving a false impression of innocence
Words with similar meanings:
INIMICAL: hostile, unfriendly
Even though a cease-fire had been in place for months, the two sides were still INIMICAL to each other.
Words with similar meanings:
INNOCUOUS: harmless
Some snakes are poisonous, but most species are INNOCUOUS and pose no danger to humans.
Words with similar meanings:
BENIGN HARMLESS INOFFENSIVE
INSIPID: lacking interest or flavor
The critic claimed that the painting was INSIPID, containing no interesting qualities at all.
Words with similar meanings:
BANAL BLAND DULL
STALE VAPID
INTRANSIGENT: uncompromising; refusing to be reconciled
The professor was INTRANSIGENT on the deadline, insisting that everyone turn the assignment in at the same time.
Words with similar meanings:
INUNDATE: to overwhelm; to cover with water
The tidal wave INUNDATED Atlantis, which was lost beneath the water.
Words with similar meanings:
IRASCIBLE: easily made angry
Attila the Hun’s IRASCIBLE and violent nature made all who dealt with him fear for their lives.
Related words:
IRATE: angry
Words with similar meanings:
LACONIC: using few words
She was a LACONIC poet who built her reputation on using words as sparingly as possible.
Words with similar meanings:
LAMENT: to express sorrow; to grieve
The children continued to LAMENT the death of the goldfish weeks after its demise.
Words with similar meanings:
LAUD: to give praise; to glorify
Parades and fireworks were staged to LAUD the success of the rebels.
Related words:
LAUDABLE: worth of praise LAUDATORY: expressing praise
Words with similar meanings:
LAVISH: to give unsparingly (v.); extremely generous or extravagant (adj.)
She LAVISHED the puppy with so many treats that it soon become overweight and spoiled.
Words with similar meanings:
LETHARGIC: acting in an indifferent or slow, sluggish manner
The clerk was so LETHARGIC that, even when the store was slow, he always had a long line in front of him.
Words with similar meanings:
LOQUACIOUS: talkative
She was naturally LOQUACIOUS, which was a problem in situations in which listening was more important than talking.
Related words:
ELOQUENCE: powerful, convincing speaking
LOQUACITY: the quality of being loquacious
Words with similar meanings:
EFFUSIVE GARRULOUS VERBOSE
LUCID: clear and easily understood
The explanations were written in a simple and LUCID manner so that students were immediately able to apply what they learned.
Related words:
LUCIDITY: clarity LUCENT: glowing with light
Words with similar meanings:
LUMINOUS: bright, brilliant, glowing
The park was bathed in LUMINOUS sunshine that warmed the bodies and the souls of the visitors.
Related words:
ILLUMINATE: to shine light on
LUMINARY: an inspiring person
Words with similar meanings:
MALINGER: to evade responsibility by pretending to be ill
A common way to avoid the draft was by MALINGERING—pretending to be mentally or physically ill so as to avoid being taken by the Army.
Related words:
LINGER: to be slow in leaving
Words with similar meanings:
SHIRK SLACK
MALLEABLE: capable of being shaped
Gold is the most MALLEABLE of precious metals; it can easily be formed into almost any shape.
Words with similar meanings:
METAPHOR: a figure of speech comparing two different things; a symbol
The METAPHOR “a sea of troubles” suggests a lot of troubles by comparing their number to the vastness of the sea.
Related words:
METAPHORICAL: standing as a symbol for something else
Words with similar meanings:
ANALOGY COMPARISON
METICULOUS: extremely careful about details
To find all the clues at the crime scene, the investigators METICULOUSLY examined every inch of the area.
Words with similar meanings:
CONSCIENTIOUS PRECISE SCRUPULOUS
MISANTHROPE: a person who dislikes others
The character Scrooge in A Christmas Carol is such a MISANTHROPE that even the sight of children singing makes him angry.
MITIGATE: to soften; to lessen
A judge may MITIGATE a sentence if she decides that a person committed a crime out of need.
Words with similar meanings:
MOLLIFY: to calm or make less severe
Their argument was so intense that is was difficult to believe any compromise would MOLLIFY them.
Words with similar meanings:
MONOTONY: lack of variation
The MONOTONY of the sound of the dripping faucet almost drove the research assistant crazy.
Related words:
MONOTONE: a sound that is made at the same tone or pitch
Words with similar meanings:
DRONE TEDIUM
NAIVE: lacking sophistication or experience
Having never traveled before, the hillbillies were more NAIVE than the people they met in Beverly Hills.
Related words:
NAIVETÉ: the state of being naive
Words with similar meanings:
OBDURATE: hardened in feeling; resistant to persuasion
The President was completely OBDURATE on the issue, and no amount of persuasion would change his mind.
Words with similar meanings:
OBSEQUIOUS: overly submissive and eager to please
The OBSEQUIOUS new associate made sure to compliment her supervisor’s tie and agree with him on every issue.
Related words:
OBEISANCE: a physical show of respect or submission, such as a bow
Words with similar meanings:
OBSTINATE: stubborn, unyielding
The OBSTINATE child could not be made to eat any food that he disliked.
Words with similar meanings:
OBVIATE: to prevent; to make unnecessary
The river was shallow enough to wade across at many points, which OBVIATED the need for a bridge.
Words with similar meanings:
FORESTALL PRECLUDE PROHIBIT
OCCLUDE: to stop up; to prevent the passage of
A shadow is thrown across the Earth’s surface during a solar eclipse,when the light from the sun is OCCLUDED by the moon.
Words with similar meanings:
ONEROUS: troublesome and oppressive; burdensome
The assignment was so extensive and difficult to manage that it proved ONEROUS to the team in charge of it.
Words with similar meanings:
OPAQUE: impossible to see through; preventing the passage of light
The heavy buildup of dirt and grime on the windows almost made them OPAQUE.
Related words:
OPACITY: the quality of being obscure and indecipherable
Words with similar meanings:
OBSCURE
OPPROBRIUM: public disgrace
After the scheme to embezzle the elderly was made public, the treasurer resigned in utter OPPROBRIUM.
Words with similar meanings:
OSTENTATION: excessive showiness
The OSTENTATION of the Sun King’s court is evident in the lavish decoration and luxuriousness of his palace at Versailles.
Related words:
OSTENSIBLE: apparent
Words with similar meanings:
PARADOX: a contradiction or dilemma It is a PARADOX that those most in need of medical attention are often those least able to obtain it.
Words with similar meanings:
AMBIGUITY INCONGRUITY
PARAGON: model of excellence or perfection
She is the PARAGON of what a judge should be: honest, intelligent, hardworking, and just.
Words with similar meanings:
PEDANT: someone who shows off learning
The graduate instructor’s tedious and excessive commentary on the subject soon gained her a reputation as a PEDANT.
Related words:
PEDANTIC: making an excessive display of learning
PERFIDIOUS: willing to betray one’s trust
The actress’s PERFIDIOUS companion revealed all of her intimate secrets to the gossip columnist.
Related words:
PERFIDY: deceit, treachery
Words with similar meanings:
PERFUNCTORY: done in a routine way; indifferent
The machinelike bank teller processed the transaction and gave the waiting customer a PERFUNCTORY smile.
Words with similar meanings:
APATHETIC AUTOMATIC MECHANICAL
PERMEATE: to penetrate
This miraculous new cleaning fluid is able to PERMEATE stains and dissolve them in minutes!
Related words:
IMPERMEABLE: unable to be permeated
Words with similar meanings:
IMBUE INFUSE SUFFUSE
PHILANTHROPY: charity; a desire or effort to promote goodness
New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art owes much of its collection to the PHILANTHROPY of private collectors who willed their estates to the museum.
Related words:
PHILANTHROPIST: someone who is generous and desires to promote goodness
Words with similar meanings:
HUMANITARIANISM ALTRUISM
PLACATE: to soothe or pacify
The burglar tried to PLACATE the snarling dog by saying, “Nice doggy,” and offering it a treat.
Related words:
PLACID: tolerant; calm IMPLACABLE: unable to be made peaceful
Words with similar meanings:
APPEASE CONCILIATE MOLLIFY
PLASTIC: able to be molded, altered, or bent
The new material was very PLASTIC and could be formed into products of vastly different shape.
Words with similar meanings:
PLETHORA: excess
Assuming that more was better, the defendant offered the judge a PLETHORA of excuses.
Words with similar meanings:
PRAGMATIC: practical as opposed to idealistic
While daydreaming gamblers think they can get rich by frequenting casinos, PRAGMATIC gamblers realize that the odds are heavily stacked against them.
Related words:
PRAGMATISM: a practical approach to problem solving
Words with similar meanings:
RATIONAL REALISTIC
PRECIPITATE: to throw violently or bring about abruptly; lacking deliberation
Upon learning that the couple married after knowing each other only two months, friends and family members expected such a PRECIPITATE marriage to end in divorce.
Related words:
PRECIPITOUS: very steep
PRECIPICE: a steep cliff
PRECIPITATION: weather phenomena, like rain or snow, that fall from the sky
Words with similar meanings:
PREVARICATE: to lie or deviate from the truth
Rather than admit that he had overslept again, the employee PREVARICATED and claimed that heavy traffic had prevented him from arriving at work on time.
Words with similar meanings:
EQUIVOCATE LIE PERJURE
PRISTINE: fresh and clean; uncorrupted
Since concerted measures had been taken to prevent looting, the archeological site was still PRISTINE when researchers arrived.
Words with similar meanings:
INNOCENT UNDAMAGED
PRODIGAL: lavish, wasteful
The PRODIGAL Son quickly wasted all of his inheritance on a lavish lifestyle devoted to pleasure.
Related words:
PRODIGALITY: excessive or reckless spending
Words with similar meanings:
PROLIFERATE: to increase in number quickly
Although he only kept two guinea pigs initially, they PROLIFERATED to such an extent that he soon had dozens.
Related words:
PROLIFIC: very productive or highly able to reproduce rapidly
Words with similar meanings:
PROPITIATE: to conciliate; to appease
The management PROPITIATED the irate union by agreeing to raise wages for its members.
Related words:
PROPITIOUS: advantageous, favorable
Words with similar meanings:
PROPRIETY: correct behavior; obedience to rules and customs
The aristocracy maintained a high level of PROPRIETY, adhering to even the most minor social rules.
Related words:
APPROPRIATE: suitable for a particular occasion or place
Words with similar meanings:
PRUDENCE: wisdom, caution, or restraint
The college student exhibited PRUDENCE by obtaining practical experience along with her studies, which greatly strengthened her résumé.
Related words:
PRUDE: someone who is excessively concerned with propriety
PRUDISH: prissy and puritanical
Words with similar meanings:
PUNGENT: sharp and irritating to the senses
The smoke from the burning tires was extremely PUNGENT.
Words with similar meanings:
QUIESCENT: motionless
Many animals are QUIESCENT over the winter months, minimizing activity in order to conserve energy.
Related words:
QUIESCENCE: state of rest or inactivity
Words with similar meanings:
DORMANT LATENT
RAREFY: to make thinner or sparser
Since the atmosphere RAREFIES as altitudes increase, the air at the top of very tall mountains is too thin to breathe.
Related words:
RAREFACTION: the process of making something less dense
Words with similar meanings:
ATTENUATE THIN
REPUDIATE: to reject the validity of
The old woman’s claim that she was Russian royalty was REPUDIATED when DNA tests showed she was of no relation to them.
Words with similar meanings:
RETICENT: silent, reserved
Physically small and RETICENT in her speech, Joan Didion often went unnoticed by those upon whom she was reporting.
Words with similar meanings:
RHETORIC: effective writing or speaking
Lincoln’s talent for RHETORIC was evident in his beautifully expressed Gettysburg Address.
Words with similar meanings:
ELOQUENCE ORATORY
SATIATE: to satisfy fully or overindulge
His desire for power was so great that nothing less than complete control of the country could SATIATE it.
Related words:
SATE: to fully satisfy or overindulge INSATIABLE:
incapable of being satisfied
Words with similar meanings:
SOPORIFIC: causing sleep or lethargy
The movie proved to be so SOPORIFIC that soon loud snores were heard throughout the theater.
Related words:
SOPOR: deep sleep
Words with similar meanings:
SPECIOUS: deceptively attractive; seemingly plausible but fallacious
The student’s SPECIOUS excuse for being late sounded legitimate, but was proved otherwise when his teacher called his home.
Words with similar meanings:
STIGMA: a mark of shame or discredit
In The Scarlet Letter, Hester Prynne was required to wear the letter “A” on her clothes as a public STIGMA for her adultery.
Related words:
STIGMATIZE: to disgrace; to label with negative terms or reputation
Words with similar meanings:
STOLID: unemotional; lacking sensitivity
The prisoner appeared STOLID and unaffected by the judge’s harsh sentence.
Words with similar meanings:
SUBLIME: lofty or grand
The music was so SUBLIME that it transformed the rude surroundings into a special place.
Related words:
SUBLIMATE: to elevate or convert into something of higher worth
SUBLIMINAL: existing outside conscious awareness
Words with similar meanings:
TACIT: done without using words
Although not a word had been said, everyone in the room knew that a TACIT agreement had been made about which course of action to take.
Related words:
TACITURN: silent, not talkative
Words with similar meanings:
TACITURN: silent, not talkative
The clerk’s TACITURN nature earned him the nickname “Silent Bob.”
Related words:
TACIT: done without using words
Words with similar meanings:
LACONIC RETICENT
TIRADE: long, harsh speech or verbal attack
Observers were shocked at the manager’s TIRADE over such a minor mistake.
Words with similar meanings:
TORPOR: extreme mental and physical sluggishness
After surgery, the patient experienced TORPOR until the anesthesia wore off.
Related words:
TORPID: sluggish, lacking movement
Words with similar meanings:
APATHY LANGUOR
TRANSITORY: temporary, lasting a brief time
The reporter lived a TRANSITORY life, staying in one place only long enough to cover the current story.
Related words:
TRANSIT: to pass through; to change or make a transition
TRANSIENT: passing quickly in and out of existence; one who stays a short time
Words with similar meanings:
VACILLATE: to sway physically; to be indecisive
The customer held up the line as he VACILLATED between ordering chocolate chip or rocky road ice cream.
Words with similar meanings:
VENERATE: to respect deeply
In a traditional Confucian society, the young VENERATE their elders, deferring to the elders’ wisdom and experience.
Related words:
VENERABLE: old, worthy of respect
Words with similar meanings:
VERACITY: filled with truth and accuracy
She had a reputation for VERACITY, so everyone trusted her description of events.
Related words:
VERITY: truth
VERACIOUS: truthful, accurate
Words with similar meanings:
VERBOSE: wordy
The professor’s answer was so VERBOSE that his student forgot what the original question had been.
Related words:
VERBALIZE: to put into words
VERBATIM: to quote using the exact words, word for word VERBIAGE: lots of words that are usually superfluous
Words with similar meanings:
VEX: to annoy
The old man who loved his peace and quiet was VEXED by his neighbor’s loud music.
Related words:
VEXATION: a feeling of irritation
Words with similar meanings:
VOLATILE: easily aroused or changeable; lively or explosive
His VOLATILE personality made it difficult to predict his reaction to anything.
Words with similar meanings:
WAVER: to fluctuate between choices
If you WAVER too long before making a decision about which testing site to register for, you may not get your first choice.
Words with similar meanings:
WHIMSICAL: acting in a fanciful or capricious manner; unpredictable
The ballet was WHIMSICAL, delighting the children with its imaginative characters and unpredictable sets.
Related words:
WHIM: a fancy or sudden notion
Words with similar meanings:
ZEAL: passion, excitement
She brought her typical ZEAL to the project, sparking enthusiasm in the other team members.
Related words:
ZEALOT: a fanatic
Words with similar meanings:
Learning words in groups is an efficient way of increasing your GRE vocabulary, since the GRE often tests only that you have a general sense of what a word means. Say you saw the following question on the test:
DENOUNCE:
A blaspheme
B acclaim
C permit
D gather
E assist
If you looked up denounce in a dictionary, you’d see something like this:
De•nounce (dî-nouns’) transitive verb, de•nounced, de•nounc•ing, de•nounc•es [Middle English:denouncen, denounsen, fr. Latin denoncier, fr. de + nuntiare to report, announce, fr. nuntius messenger]
1. To declare (a person, an idea, behavior, a philosophy) to be censurable or evil; stigmatize or accuse, especially publicly and indignantly; inveigh against openly
2. archaic to announce in a public, formal, and solemn manner: to declare or publish something disastrous
3. to inform against: declare or expose a lawbreaker to the authorities
4a. obsolete to indicate or portend
4b. archaic to announce in a warning or threatening manner
5. to proclaim formally and publicly the ending of a treaty or pact
6. Mexican Law to offer for record legal notice of a claim for a mining concession on land held by the government
Synonym see CRITICIZE
Do you need to know all this to answer the question? No—all you need to know is that denounce means something like criticize. And in the time it took you to learn the meaning of denounce from the dictionary, you could have memorized a whole list of other words that also mean something like criticize (aspersion, belittle, berate, calumny, castigate, decry, defamation, denounce, deride/derisive, diatribe, rebuke, etcetera).
And the answer to the above question? Well, that would be drawn from the list of words that mean praise (acclaim, accolade, aggrandize, encomium, eulogize, extol, fawn, laud/laudatory, venerate/ veneration, etcetera.)
This is why learning words in groups is a better general strategy for beefing up your GRE vocabulary than working slowly through the dictionary.
Just remember, the categories in which these words are listed are GENERAL and not to be taken for the exact definitions of the words.
INTRODUCTION TO THE WORD ROOT LIST
The following list presents some of the commonest word roots—mostly Greek and Latin—that appear in English. Learning to recognize these word roots is a great help in expanding your vocabulary. Many seemingly difficult words yield up their meanings easily when you recognize the word roots that make them up. Excrescence, for example, contains the roots ex-, meaning out or out of, and cresc-, meaning to grow; once you know this, the meaning of excrescence, an outgrowth (whether normal, such as hair, or abnormal, such as a wart) is easily deduced.
The list concentrates on Latin and Greek roots because these are the most frequently used to form compound words in English, and because they tend not to be self-explanatory to the average reader.Each entry gives the root in the most common form or forms in which it appears in English, with a very brief definition. (The definition does not cover all the shades of meaning of the given root, only the most important or the most broadly applicable.) The rest of the entry is a list of some of the common English words derived from this root; this list is only intended to provide a few examples of such words, and does not even come close to being exhaustive. Some words will naturally be found under more than one entry. The words themselves are not defined. We hope the Word Root List will encourage you to turn to the GRE Minidictionary, chapter 12, or, better yet, to a good dictionary.
Each of the word lists below relates to two concepts that are opposite in meaning. The words in each list relate to one of the concepts or its opposite. Try to sort out which category each word belongs in. For each word, check the oval under the appropriate concept. If you don’t know the meaning of a word, make your best guess using roots, charge (whether the word sounds “good” or “bad”), prefixes, or context to help you.
No definitions are provided. Look up words that you are unsure of in chapter 12, GRE Minidictionary.
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DIS means “not,” so here the two DIS words mean “not consolate” and “not spirited,” that is, “sad.” Also, DOL means “pain,” so dolorous and doldrums also mean “sad.”
Notice that veracious and verity both have to do with truthfulness. (The root VER is from the Latin word for truth.) Perhaps you know that Yale’s motto is “Lux et veritas,” or “light and truth.”
Notice that all the words that began with DIS had to do with disagreement.
When you talk about the pros and cons of a situation, you’re talking about the positives and negatives. Notice that the words with PRO mean “attraction” or “like.”
Notice that there are several words in this list with the same roots. For instance, valiant and valorous both use the root VAL. If intrepid means “fearless,” then trepidation must be “fear.” And dauntless and undaunted both mean the same thing.
On this list, you can use “charge” to answer many of these words. Words like fluster, frenetic, furor, kinetic, perturb, and tumultuous sound agitating, while becalm, serene, and tranquil all sound calm.
TRANS means “across,” so the five words in this list that begin with this root are all words that have to do with change.
The root BEN means “good.” Notice that the three words in this list that include this root all mean something having to do with goodness or morality.
Notice that all the words that start with SUPER have to do with excess.
Here you might want to think of clichéd phrases. For instance, an ebb tide is a tide that’s going out. A burgeoning debt is a debt that’s increasing at a healthy rate. And the moon has waxing (growing) and waning (shrinking) phases.
This is another list in which common phrases can help you figure out the meaning of words. For instance, if someone makes a salient point, it’s central to an argument. In physics, certain forces, such as air resistance, are often considered negligible, or ignored.
Notice that trammeled and fettered are joined on this list by untrammeled and unfettered. Also, notice that all the words with UN are free.
This list is full of roots to help you figure things out: NEO means “new.” GERI means “old.” Senescent comes from the Latin senex, which means “old man.” Superannuated has to do with lots of years.
In this exercise, every word that uses DE, which can mean “down,” as a prefix is negative. For instance, denounce means “to speak down” or “to criticize.”
Mercurial is a word based on a mythological figure. Mercury was the messenger of the gods who traveled with winged sandals.
Thus, mercurial is fast.
This list has several words that you can probably recognize from when they are used in context. For instance, people often refer to an “egregious error” or a “modicum of respect.”
The word Philistine comes from a reference to the ancient people of Philistia. These people had a reputation for being smug and ignorant, particularly in the area of art and culture.
Many of these words have roots that can lead you to the answer. MAL means “bad,” so maladroit deals with clumsiness. OMNI means “all,” and SCI means “knowing,” so omniscient means “all-knowing.”
Notice that there are three different words with the root LOQU in this list. LOQU means “word, speech,” so these three words all have to do with a lot of speech.
In this case, the sound of the words tell you a lot about the words themselves. If the word sounds dirty, as the words besmear, bespatter, defile, or slovenly do, you can bet that’s what it means.
This list is full of roots. SYN means “same”; CON, COM, and COLL mean “with”; and DIS means “away from” or “apart.” Use your knowledge of these roots to make your decisions.
UN means “not,” so unswayable and unbending both mean “stubborn.”
Chapter 12: GRE Minidictionary
This Minidictionary provides you with the definitions of many common GRE words. Use this list not only when you work with the vocabulary exercises but whenever you encounter an unfamiliar word anywhere—such as in released tests or everyday reading.
A
ABANDON (n) total lack of inhibition
ABASE to humble, disgrace
ABASH to embarrass
ABATEMENT decrease, reduction
ABDICATE to give up a position, right, or power
ABERRANT atypical, not normal
ABERRATION something different from the usual or normal
ABET to aid, act as accomplice
ABEYANCE temporary suppression or suspension
ABHOR to loathe, detest
ABIDING enduring, continuing
ABJECT miserable, pitiful
ABJURE to reject, abandon formally
ABLUTION act of cleansing
ABNEGATE to deny, renounce
ABOLITIONIST one who opposes the practice of slavery
ABOMINATE to hate
ABORTIVE interrupted while incomplete
ABRIDGE to condense, shorten
ABROGATE to abolish or invalidate by authority
ABRUPT sudden, unexpected
ABSCOND to depart secretly
ABSOLVE to forgive, free from blame
ABSTAIN to refrain deliberately from something
ABSTEMIOUS moderate in appetite
ABSTRACT (adj) theoretical; complex, difficult
ABSTRUSE difficult to comprehend
ABUT to touch, to be in contact with
ABYSS an extremely great depth
ACCEDE to express approval; agree to
ACCESSIBLE attainable, available; approachable
ACCESSORY attachment, ornament; accomplice, partner
ACCLAIM praise
ACCOLADE praise, distinction
ACCOMMODATING helpful
ACCORD to reconcile, come to an agreement
ACCOST to approach and speak to someone
ACCRETION growth in size or increase in amount
ACCRUE to accumulate, grow by additions
ACERBIC bitter, sharp in taste or temper
ACIDULOUS sour in taste or manner
ACME highest point, summit
ACQUIESCE to agree, comply quietly
ACQUITTAL release from blame
ACRID harsh, bitter
ACRIMONY bitterness, animosity
ACUITY sharpness
ACUMEN sharpness of insight
ACUTE sharp, pointed
ADAGE old saying or proverb
ADAMANT uncompromising, unyielding
ADAPT to accommodate, adjust
ADHERE to cling or to follow without deviation
ADJACENT next to
ADJUNCT something added, attached, or joined
ADMONISH to caution or reprimand
ADROIT skillful, accomplished, highly competent
ADULATION high praise
ADULTERATE to corrupt or make impure
ADUMBRATE to sketch, outline in a shadowy way
ADVANTAGEOUS favorable, useful
ADVENTITIOUS accidental
ADVERSARIAL antagonistic, competitive
ADVERSE unfavorable, unlucky, harmful
ADVOCATE to speak in favor of
AERIAL having to do with the air
AERIE nook or nest built high in the air
AERODYNAMIC relating to objects moving through the air
AESTHETIC pertaining to beauty or art
AFFABLE friendly, easy to approach
AFFECTED (adj) pretentious, phony
AFFINITY fondness, liking; similarity
AFFLUENT rich, abundant
AFFRONT (n) personal offense, insult
AGENDA plan, schedule
AGGRANDIZE to make larger or greater in power
AGGREGATE (n) collective mass or sum; total
AGGRIEVE to afflict, distress
AGILE well coordinated, nimble
AGITATION commotion, excitement; uneasiness
AGNOSTIC one doubting that people can know God
AGRARIAN relating to farming or rural matters
ALACRITY cheerful willingness, eagerness; speed
ALCHEMY medieval chemical philosophy based on quest to change metal into gold
ALGORITHM mechanical problem-solving procedure
ALIAS assumed name
ALIENATED distanced, estranged
ALIGNED precisely adjusted; committed to one side or party
ALLAY to lessen, ease, or soothe
ALLEGORY symbolic representation
ALLEVIATE to relieve, improve partially
ALLITERATION repetition of the beginning sounds of words
ALLOCATION allowance, portion, share
ALLURE (v) to entice by charm; attract
ALLUSION indirect reference
ALLUSIVENESS quality of making many indirect references
ALOOF detached, indifferent
ALTERCATION noisy dispute
ALTRUISM unselfish concern for others’ welfare
AMALGAM mixture, combination, alloy
AMBIDEXTROUS able to use both hands equally well
AMBIGUOUS uncertain; subject to multiple interpretations
AMBIVALENCE attitude of uncertainty; conflicting emotions
AMBULATORY itinerant; related to walking around
AMELIORATE to make better, improve
AMENABLE agreeable, cooperative
AMEND to improve or correct flaws in
AMENITY pleasantness; something increasing comfort
AMIABLE friendly, pleasant, likable
AMICABLE friendly, agreeable
AMITY friendship
AMORAL unprincipled, unethical
AMOROUS strongly attracted to love; showing love
AMORPHOUS having no definite form
AMORTIZE to diminish by installment payments
AMPHIBIAN (n) creature equally at home on land or in water
AMPHITHEATER arena theater with rising tiers around a central open space
AMPLE abundant, plentiful
AMPLIFY to increase, intensify
AMULET ornament worn as a charm against evil spirits
ANACHRONISM something chronologically inappropriate
ANACHRONISTIC outdated
ANALGESIA a lessening of pain
ANALOGOUS comparable, parallel
ANARCHY absence of government or law; chaos
ANATHEMA ban, curse; something shunned or disliked
ANCILLARY accessory, subordinate, helping
ANECDOTE short, usually funny account of an event
ANGULAR characterized by sharp angles; lean and gaunt
ANIMATION enthusiasm, excitement
ANIMOSITY hatred, hostility
ANNUL to cancel, nullify, declare void, or make legally invalid
ANODYNE something that calms or soothes pain
ANOINT to apply oil to, esp. as a sacred rite
ANOMALY irregularity or deviation from the norm
ANONYMITY condition of having no name or an unknown name
ANTAGONIST foe, opponent, adversary
ANTECEDENT (adj) coming before in place or time
ANTEDATE dated prior to the actual occurrence
ANTEDILUVIAN prehistoric, ancient beyond measure
ANTEPENULTIMATE third from last
ANTERIOR preceding, previous, before, prior (to)
ANTHOLOGY collection of literary works
ANTHROPOMORPHIC attributing human qualities to nonhumans
ANTIPATHY dislike, hostility; extreme opposition or aversion
ANTIQUATED outdated, obsolete
ANTIQUITY ancient times; the quality of being old or ancient
ANTITHESIS exact opposite or direct contrast
APACE done quickly
APATHETIC indifferent, unconcerned
APATHY lack of feeling or emotion
APERTURE an opening or hole
APHASIA inability to speak or use words
APHELION point in a planet’s orbit that is farthest from the sun
APHORISM old saying or short pithy statement
APLOMB poise, confidence
APOCRYPHAL not genuine; fictional
APOSTATE (n) one who renounces a religious faith
APOSTROPHE speech to the reader or someone not present; a superscript sign (‘)
APOTHEGM a short, instructive saying
APOTHEOSIS glorification; glorified ideal
APPEASE to satisfy, placate, calm, pacify
APPEND to attach
APPLAUSE praise
APPRAISE to evaluate the value of something
APPREHENSION the act of comprehending; fear, foreboding
APPRISE to give notice of; inform
APPROBATION praise; official approval
APPROPRIATE (v) to take possession of
AQUATIC belonging or living in water
ARABLE suitable for cultivation
ARBITRARY depending solely on individual will; inconsistent
ARBITRATOR mediator, negotiator
ARBOREAL relating to trees; living in trees
ARBORETUM place where trees are displayed and studied
ARCANE secret, obscure, known only to a few
ARCHAIC antiquated, from an earlier time; outdated
ARCHIPELAGO large group of islands
ARDENT passionate, enthusiastic, fervent
ARDOR great emotion or passion
ARDUOUS extremely difficult, laborious
ARID extremely dry or deathly boring
ARRAIGN to call to court to answer a charge
ARROGATE to demand, claim arrogantly
ARSENAL ammunition storehouse
ARTICULATE (adj) well-spoken, expressing oneself clearly
ARTIFACT historical relic, item made by human craft
ARTISAN craftsperson; expert
ARTLESS open and honest
ASCEND to rise or climb
ASCENDANCY state of rising, ascending; power or control
ASCERTAIN to determine, discover, make certain of
ASCETIC (adj) self-denying, abstinent, austere
ASCRIBE to attribute to, assign
ASHEN resembling ashes; deathly pale
ASININE lacking intelligence or sound judgment
ASKANCE scornfully
ASKEW crooked, tilted
ASOCIAL unable or unwilling to interact socially
ASPERITY harshness, roughness
ASPERSION false rumor, damaging report, slander
ASPIRE to have great hopes; to aim at a goal
ASSAIL to attack, assault
ASSAY to analyze or estimate
ASSENT (v) to express agreement
ASSERT to affirm, attest
ASSIDUOUS diligent, persistent, hardworking
ASSIGNATION appointment for lovers’ meeting; assignment
ASSIMILATION act of blending in, becoming similar
ASSONANCE resemblance in sound, especially in vowel sounds; partial rhyme
ASSUAGE to make less severe, ease, relieve
ASTRAL exalted, elevated in position; relating to the stars
ASTRINGENT harsh, severe, stern
ASTUTE having good judgment
ASUNDER (adv) into different parts
ASYMMETRICAL not corresponding in size, shape, position, etc.
ATONE to make amends for a wrong
ATROCIOUS monstrous, shockingly bad, wicked
ATROPHY (v) to waste away, wither from disuse
ATTAIN to accomplish, gain
ATTENUATE to make thin or slender; weaken
ATTEST to testify, stand as proof of, bear witness
AUDACIOUS bold, daring, fearless
AUDIBLE capable of being heard
AUDIT (n) formal examination of financial records
AUDITORY having to do with hearing
AUGMENT to expand, extend
AUGURY (adj) prophecy, prediction of events
AUGUST dignified, awe-inspiring, venerable
AUSPICIOUS having favorable prospects, promising
AUSTERE stern, strict, unadorned
AUTHORITARIAN extremely strict, bossy
AUTOCRAT dictator
AUTONOMOUS separate, independent
AUXILIARY supplementary, reserve
AVARICE greed
AVENGE to retaliate, take revenge for an injury or crime
AVER to declare to be true, affirm
AVERSE being disinclined towards something
AVERSION intense dislike
AVERT to turn (something) away; prevent
AVIARY large enclosure housing birds
AVOW to state openly or declare
AWRY crooked, askew, amiss
AXIOM premise, postulate, self-evident truth
B
BACCHANALIAN drunkenly festive
BALEFUL harmful, with evil intentions
BALK (v) to refuse, shirk; prevent
BALLAD folk song, narrative poem
BALM soothing, healing influence
BAN (v) to forbid, outlaw
BANAL trite and overly common
BANE something causing ruin, death, or destruction
BANTER playful conversation
BASE being of low value or position
BASTION fortification, stronghold
BAY (v) to bark, especially in a deep, prolonged way
BEATIFIC appearing to be saintly, angelic
BECALM to make calm or still; keep motionless by lack of wind
BECLOUD to confuse; darken with clouds
BEGUILE to deceive, mislead; charm
BEHEMOTH huge creature
BELABOR to insist repeatedly or harp on
BELATED late
BELEAGUER to harass, plague
BELFRY bell tower, room in which a bell is hung
BELIE to misrepresent; expose as false
BELITTLE to represent as unimportant, make light of
BELLICOSE warlike, aggressive
BELLIGERENT hostile, tending to fight
BELLOW to roar, shout
BEMUSE to confuse, stupefy; plunge deep into thought
BENCHMARK standard of measure
BENEFACTOR someone giving aid or money
BENEFICENT kindly, charitable; doing good deeds; producing good effects
BENEFICIAL advantageous
BENIGHTED unenlightened
BENIGN kindly, gentle or harmless
BENISON blessing
BENT a natural inclination towards something
BEQUEATH to give or leave through a will; to hand down
BERATE to scold harshly
BEREAVED suffering the death of a loved one
BESEECH to beg, plead, implore
BESMEAR to smear
BESPATTER to spatter
BESTIAL beastly, animal-like
BESTOW to give as a gift
BETOKEN to indicate, signify, give evidence of
BEVY group
BIAS prejudice, slant
BIBLIOGRAPHY list of books
BIBLIOPHILE book lover
BICKER to have a petty argument
BIFURCATE divide into two parts
BILATERAL two sided
BILIOUS bad-natured
BILK to cheat, defraud
BILLET board and lodging for troops
BIPED two-footed animal
BISECT to cut into two (usually equal) parts
BLANCH to pale; take the color out of
BLANDISH to coax with flattery
BLASPHEMOUS cursing, profane, irreverent
BLATANT glaring, obvious, showy
BLIGHT (v) to afflict, destroy
BLITHE joyful, cheerful, or without appropriate thought
BLUDGEON to hit as with a short, heavy club
BLUSTER to boast or make threats loudly
BOISTEROUS rowdy, loud, unrestrained
BOLSTER to support; reinforce
BOMBASTIC using high-sounding but meaningless language
BONANZA extremely large amount; something profitable
BONHOMIE good-natured geniality; atmosphere of good cheer
BOON blessing, something to be thankful for
BOOR crude person, one lacking manners or taste
BOTANIST scientist who studies plants
BOUNTIFUL plentiful
BOUQUET a bunch of cut flowers
BOURGEOIS middle class
BOVINE relating to cows
BRAZEN bold, shameless, impudent; of or like brass
BREACH act of breaking, violation
BREVITY the quality of being brief in time
BRIGAND bandit, outlaw
BROACH to mention or suggest for the first time
BROMIDE a dull, commonplace person or idea
BRUSQUE rough and abrupt in manner
BUFFET (v) to strike, hit
BUFFOON clown or fool
BULWARK defense wall; anything serving as defense
BURGEON to sprout or flourish
BURLY brawny, husky
BURNISH to polish, make smooth and bright
BURSAR treasurer
BUSTLE commotion, energetic activity
BUTT person or thing that is object of ridicule
BUTTRESS (v) to reinforce or support
BYWAY back road
C
CABAL a secret group seeking to overturn something
CACOPHONOUS jarring, unpleasantly noisy
CADAVER dead body
CADENCE rhythmic flow of poetry; marching beat
CAJOLE to flatter, coax, persuade
CALAMITOUS disastrous, catastrophic
CALLOUS thick-skinned, insensitive
CALLOW immature, lacking sophistication
CALUMNY false and malicious accusation, misrepresentation, slander
CANARD a lie
CANDID frank or fair
CANDOR honesty of expression
CANNY smart; founded on common sense
CANONIZE to declare a person a saint; raise to highest honors
CANVASS to examine thoroughly; conduct a poll
CAPACIOUS large, roomy; extensive
CAPITULATE to submit completely, surrender
CAPRICIOUS impulsive, whimsical, without much thought
CARDIOLOGIST physician specializing in diseases of the heart
CAREEN to lean to one side
CARICATURE exaggerated portrait, cartoon
CARNAL of the flesh
CARNIVOROUS meat-eating
CAROM to strike and rebound
CARP (v) to find fault, complain constantly
CARTOGRAPHY science or art of making maps
CAST (n) copy, replica
CAST (v) to fling, to throw
CASTIGATE to punish, chastise, criticize severely
CATACLYSMIC disastrous
CATALYST something causing change without being changed
CATEGORICAL absolute, without exception
CATHARSIS purification, cleansing
CATHOLIC universal; broad and comprehensive
CAUCUS smaller group within an organization; a meeting of such a group
CAULK to make watertight
CAUSALITY cause-and-effect relationship
CAUSTIC biting, sarcastic; able to burn
CAVALCADE a procession
CAVALIER (adj) carefree, happy; with lordly disdain
CAVIL to raise trivial objections
CAVORT to frolic, frisk
CEDE to surrender possession of something
CELEBRITY fame, widespread acclaim
CELERITY quick moving or acting
CENSORIOUS severely critical
CENSURE to criticize or find fault with
CENTRIPETAL directed or moving towards the center
CERTITUDE assurance, certainty
CESSATION temporary or complete halt
CESSION act of surrendering something
CHAGRIN shame, embarrassment, humiliation
CHALICE goblet, cup
CHAMP (v) chew noisily
CHAMPION (v) to defend or support
CHAOS confusion
CHAOTIC extremely disorderly
CHARLATAN quack, fake
CHARM compelling attractiveness
CHARY watchful, cautious, extremely shy
CHASTISE to punish, discipline, scold
CHATTEL piece of personal property
CHAUVINIST someone prejudiced in the belief of their kind’s superiority
CHEEKY lacking prudence or discretion
CHERUBIC sweet, innocent, resembling a cherub angel
CHICANERY trickery, fraud, deception
CHIDE to scold, express disapproval
CHIMERICAL fanciful, imaginary, visionary; impossible
CHOICE (adj) specially selected, preferred
CHOLERIC easily angered, short-tempered
CHORTLE to chuckle
CHROMATIC relating to color
CHRONICLER one who keeps records of historical events
CHURLISH rude
CIRCUITOUS roundabout
CIRCUMFERENCE boundary or distance around a circle or sphere
CIRCUMLOCUTION roundabout, lengthy way of saying something
CIRCUMNAVIGATE to sail completely around
CIRCUMSCRIBE to encircle; set limits on, confine
CIRCUMSPECT cautious, wary
CIRCUMVENT to go around; avoid
CISTERN tank for rainwater
CITADEL fortress or stronghold
CIVIL polite; relating to citizens
CIVILITY courtesy, politeness
CLAIRVOYANT (adj) having ESP, psychic
CLAMOR (n) noisy outcry
CLAMOR (v) to make a noisy outcry
CLANDESTINE secretive, concealed for a darker purpose
CLARITY clearness; clear understanding
CLAUSTROPHOBIA fear of small, confined places
CLEAVE to split or separate; to stick, cling, adhere
CLEMENCY merciful leniency
CLEMENT mild
CLOISTER (v) to confine, seclude
CLOYING indulging to excess
COAGULATE to clot or change from a liquid to a solid
COALESCE to grow together or cause to unite as one
CODDLE to baby, treat indulgently
COERCE to compel by force or intimidation
COFFER strongbox, large chest for money
COGENT logically forceful, compelling, convincing
COGNATE related, similar, akin
COGNITION mental process by which knowledge is acquired
COGNOMEN family name; any name, especially a nickname
COHABIT to live together
COHERENT intelligible, lucid, understandable
COLLATE to arrange in an order
COLLATERAL accompanying
COLLECTED acting calm and composed
COLLOQUIAL characteristic of informal speech
COLLOQUY dialog or conversation, conference
COLLUSION collaboration, complicity, conspiracy
COMELINESS physical grace and beauty
COMMEND to compliment, praise
COMMENSURATE proportional
COMMISSION fee payable to an agent; authorization
COMMODIOUS roomy, spacious
COMMONPLACE ordinary, found every day
COMMUNICABLE transmittable
COMMUTE to change a penalty to a less severe one
COMPATRIOT fellow countryman
COMPELLING (adj) having a powerful and irresistible effect
COMPENDIOUS summarizing completely and briefly
COMPENSATE to repay or reimburse
COMPLACENT self-satisfied, smug, affable
COMPLAISANT agreeable, friendly
COMPLEMENT to complete, perfect
COMPLIANT submissive and yielding
COMPLICITY knowing partnership in wrongdoing
COMPOSED acting calm
COMPOSURE a calm manner or appearance
COMPOUND (adj) complex; composed of several parts
COMPOUND (v) to combine, add to
COMPRESS (v) to reduce, squeeze
COMPULSIVE obsessive, fanatic
COMPUNCTION feeling of uneasiness caused by guilt or regret
COMPUNCTIOUS feeling guilty or having misgivings
CONCATENATE linked together
CONCAVE curving inward
CONCEDE to yield, admit
CONCEPTUALIZE to envision, imagine
CONCERN a matter of importance or worthy of consideration
CONCERTO musical composition for orchestra and soloist(s)
CONCILIATORY overcoming distrust or hostility
CONCOMITANT accompanying something
CONCORD agreement
CONCUR to agree
CONDONE to pardon or forgive; overlook, justify, or excuse a fault
CONDUIT tube, pipe, or similar passage
CONFECTION something sweet to eat
CONFISCATE to appropriate, seize
CONFLAGRATION big, destructive fire
CONFLUENCE meeting place; meeting of two streams
CONFOUND to baffle, perplex
CONGEAL to become thick or solid, as a liquid freezing
CONGENIAL similar in tastes and habits
CONGENITAL existing since birth
CONGLOMERATE collected group of varied things
CONGRESS formal meeting or assembly
CONGRUITY correspondence, harmony, agreement
CONJECTURE speculation, prediction
CONJOIN to join together
CONJUGAL pertaining to marriage
CONJURE to evoke a spirit, cast a spell
CONNIVE to conspire, scheme
CONNOISSEUR a person with refined taste
CONSANGUINEOUS of the same origin; related by blood
CONSCIENTIOUS governed by conscience; careful and thorough
CONSECRATE to declare sacred; dedicate to a goal
CONSENSUS unanimity, agreement of opinion or attitude
CONSEQUENTIAL important
CONSIDERABLE significant, worth considering
CONSIGN to commit, entrust
CONSISTENT containing no contradictions, being harmonious
CONSOLATION something providing comfort or solace for a loss or hardship
CONSOLIDATE to combine, incorporate
CONSONANT (adj) consistent with, in agreement with
CONSTANT completely uniform and unchanging
CONSTITUENT component, part; citizen, voter
CONSTRAINED forced, compelled; confined, restrained
CONSTRAINT something that forces or compels; something that restrains or confines
CONSTRICT to inhibit
CONSTRUE to explain or interpret
CONSUMMATE (adj) accomplished, complete, perfect
CONSUMMATE (v) to complete, fulfill
CONTEND to battle, clash; compete
CONTENTIOUS quarrelsome, disagreeable, belligerent
CONTINENCE self-control, self-restraint
CONTRADICT to deny or oppose
CONTRAVENE to contradict, deny, act contrary to
CONTRITE deeply sorrowful and repentant for a wrong
CONTUMACIOUS rebellious
CONTUSION bruise
CONUNDRUM riddle, puzzle, or problem with no solution
CONVALESCENCE gradual recovery after an illness
CONVENE to meet, come together, assemble
CONVENTIONAL typical, customary, commonplace
CONVEX curved outward
CONVIVIAL sociable; fond of eating, drinking, and people
CONVOKE to call together, summon
CONVOLUTED twisted, complicated, involved
COPIOUS abundant, plentiful
COQUETTE woman who flirts
CORNUCOPIA abundance
CORPOREAL having to do with the body; tangible, material
CORPULENCE obesity, fatness, bulkiness
CORRELATION association, mutual relation of two or more things
CORROBORATE to confirm, verify
CORRODE to weaken or destroy
CORRUGATE to mold in a shape with parallel grooves and ridges
COSMETIC (adj) relating to beauty; affecting the surface of something
COSMOGRAPHY science that deals with the nature of the universe
COSMOPOLITAN sophisticated, free from local prejudices
COSSET to pamper, treat with great care
COTERIE small group of persons with a common interest or a similar purpose
COUNTENANCE (n) facial expression; look of approval or support
COUNTENANCE (v) to favor, support
COUNTERMAND to annul, cancel, make a contrary order
COUNTERVAIL to counteract, exert force against
COVEN group of witches
COVERT hidden; secret
COVET to strongly desire something possessed by another
COWER to cringe in fear
CRASS crude, unrefined
CRAVEN cowardly
CREDENCE acceptance of something as true or real
CREDIBLE plausible, believable
CREDULOUS gullible, trusting
CREED statement of belief or principle
CRESCENDO gradual increase in volume of sound
CRINGE to shrink in fear
CRITERION standard for judging, rule for testing
CRYPTIC puzzling
CUISINE characteristic style of cooking
CULMINATION climax, final stage
CULPABLE guilty, responsible for wrong
CULPRIT guilty person
CUMULATIVE resulting from gradual increase
CUPIDITY greed
CURATOR caretaker and overseer of an exhibition, esp. in a museum
CURMUDGEON cranky person
CURSORY hastily done, superficial
CURT abrupt, blunt
CURTAIL to shorten
CUTLERY cutting instruments; tableware
CYGNET young swan
CYNIC person who distrusts the motives of others
D
DALLY to act playfully or waste time
DAUNT to discourage, intimidate
DEARTH lack, scarcity, insufficiency
DEBASE to degrade or lower in quality or stature
DEBAUCH to corrupt, seduce from virtue or duty; indulge
DEBILITATE to weaken, enfeeble
DEBUNK to discredit, disprove
DEBUTANTE young woman making debut in high society
DECADENCE decline or decay, deterioration
DECAMP to leave suddenly
DECAPITATE to behead
DECATHLON athletic contest with ten events
DECIDUOUS losing leaves in the fall; short-lived, temporary
DECLIVITY downward slope
DECOROUS proper, tasteful, socially correct
DECORUM proper behavior, etiquette
DECRY to belittle, openly condemn
DEFACE to mar the appearance of, vandalize
DEFAMATORY slanderous, injurious to the reputation
DEFAME to disgrace or slander
DEFECT an imperfection or shortcoming
DEFENDANT person required to answer a legal action or suit
DEFER to submit or yield
DEFERENCE respect, honor
DEFERENTIAL respectful and polite in a submissive way
DEFICIENT defective, not meeting a normal standard
DEFILE to make unclean or dishonor
DEFINITIVE clear-cut, explicit or decisive
DEFLATION decrease, depreciation
DEFORM to disfigure, distort
DEFT skillful, dexterous
DEFUNCT no longer existing, dead, extinct
DELECTABLE appetizing, delicious
DELEGATE (v) to give powers to another
DELETERIOUS harmful, destructive, detrimental
DELINEATION depiction, representation
DELTA tidal deposit at the mouth of a river
DELUGE (n) flood
DELUGE (v) to submerge, overwhelm
DEMAGOGUE leader or rabble-rouser who usually uses appeals to emotion or prejudice
DEMARCATION borderline; act of defining or marking a boundary or distinction
DEMEAN to degrade, humiliate, humble
DEMISE death
DEMOGRAPHICS data relating to study of human population
DEMOTE to reduce to a lower grade or rank
DEMOTION lowering in rank or grade
DEMUR to express doubts or objections
DEMYSTIFY to remove mystery from, clarify
DENIGRATE to slur or blacken someone’s reputation
DENOUNCE to accuse, blame
DENUDE to make bare, uncover, undress
DENUNCIATION public condemnation
DEPICT to describe, represent
DEPLETE to use up, exhaust
DEPLORE to express or feel disapproval of; regret strongly
DEPLOY to spread out strategically over an area
DEPOSE to remove from a high position, as from a throne
DEPRAVITY sinfulness, moral corruption
DEPRECATE to belittle, disparage
DEPRECIATE to lose value gradually
DERANGED to be disturbed or insane
DERIDE to mock, ridicule, make fun of
DERISIVE expressing ridicule or scorn
DERIVATIVE copied or adapted; not original
DERIVE to originate; take from a certain source
DEROGATE to belittle, disparage
DESCRY to discover or reveal
DESECRATE to abuse something sacred
DESICCATE to dry completely, dehydrate
DESIST to stop doing something
DESPONDENT feeling discouraged and dejected
DESPOT tyrannical ruler
DESTITUTE very poor, poverty-stricken
DESULTORY at random, rambling, unmethodical
DETACHED separate, unconnected
DETER to discourage; prevent from happening
DETERMINATE having defined limits; conclusive
DETESTATION extreme hatred
DETRACTOR one who takes something away
DETRIMENTAL causing harm or injury
DEVIATE to stray, wander
DEVIATION departure, exception, anomaly
DEVOID totally lacking
DEVOUT deeply religious
DEXTEROUS skilled physically or mentally
DIABOLICAL fiendish; wicked
DIALECT regional style of speaking
DIAPHANOUS allowing light to show through; delicate
DIATRIBE bitter verbal attack
DICHOTOMY division into two parts
DICTUM authoritative statement; popular saying
DIDACTIC excessively instructive
DIFFER disagree
DIFFERENTIATE to distinguish between two items
DIFFIDENCE shyness, lack of confidence
DIFFRACT to cause to separate into parts, esp. light
DIFFUSE widely spread out
DIGRESS to turn aside; to stray from the main point
DILAPIDATED in disrepair, run-down, neglected
DILATE to enlarge, swell, extend
DILATORY slow, tending to delay
DILETTANTE an amateur
DILUVIAL relating to a flood
DIMINUTIVE small
DIPLOMACY discretion, tact
DIRGE funeral hymn
DISABUSE to free from a misconception
DISAFFECTED discontented and disloyal
DISARRAY clutter, disorder
DISBAND to break up
DISBAR to expel from legal profession
DISBURSE to pay out
DISCERN to perceive something obscure
DISCLAIM to deny, disavow
DISCLOSE to confess, divulge
DISCOMFIT to cause perplexity and embarrassment
DISCOMPOSE to disturb the composure or serenity
DISCONCERTING bewildering, perplexing, slightly disturbing
DISCONSOLATE unable to be consoled; extremely sad
DISCORDANT harsh-sounding, badly out of tune
DISCREDIT to dishonor or disgrace
DISCREDITED disbelieved, discounted; disgraced, dishonored
DISCREPANCY difference between
DISCRETE distinct, separate
DISCRETIONARY subject to one’s own judgment
DISCURSIVE wandering from topic to topic
DISDAIN to regard with scorn and contempt
DISDAINFUL contemptuous, scornful
DISENGAGED disconnected, disassociated
DISGORGE to vomit, discharge violently
DISHEVELED untidy, disarranged, unkempt
DISINCLINED averse, unwilling, lacking desire
DISINGENUOUS sly and crafty
DISINTEREST lack of interest or a disadvantage
DISJOINTED lacking coherence or order, being separated
DISPARAGE to belittle, speak disrespectfully about
DISPARATE dissimilar, different in kind
DISPARITY contrast, dissimilarity
DISPASSIONATE free from emotion; impartial, unbiased
DISPEL to drive out or scatter
DISPENSE to distribute, administer
DISPENSE WITH to suspend the operation of, do without
DISPERSE to break up, scatter
DISPIRIT to dishearten, make dejected
DISPUTE to debate, to quarrel
DISQUIETED feeling anxiety, being disturbed, lacking peace
DISREGARD to neglect, pay no attention to
DISREPUTE disgrace, dishonor
DISSEMBLE to pretend, disguise one’s motives
DISSEMINATE to spread far and wide
DISSENSION difference of opinion
DISSIMULATE to disguise or put on a false appearance
DISSIPATE to scatter; to pursue pleasure to excess
DISSOCIATE to separate; remove from an association
DISSONANT harsh and unpleasant sounding
DISSUADE to persuade someone to alter original intentions
DISTAFF the female branch of a family
DISTEND to swell, inflate, bloat
DISTRAUGHT very worried and distressed
DISTRUST (n) disbelief and suspicion
DITHER (v) to move or act confusedly or without clear purpose
DIURNAL daily
DIVERGE to move in different directions, to deviate from a source
DIVERSE differing
DIVERT to turn from one course to another
DIVEST to get rid of
DIVINE (v) to foretell or know by inspiration
DIVISIVE creating disunity or conflict
DOCILE tame, willing to be taught
DOCTRINAIRE rigidly devoted to theories
DOGGED (adj) persistent, stubborn
DOGMATIC rigidly fixed in opinion, opinionated
DOLDRUMS a period of despondency
DOLEFUL sad, mournful
DOLOR sadness
DOLT idiot, dimwit, foolish person
DOMINEER to rule over something in a tyrannical way
DONOR benefactor, contributor
DORMANT at rest, inactive, in suspended animation
DOTAGE senile condition, mental decline
DOTARD senile old person
DOTING excessively fond, loving to excess
DOUGHTY courageous
DOUR sullen and gloomy; stern and severe
DOWRY money or property given by a bride to her husband
DRAFT (v) to plan, outline; to recruit, conscript
DRAW to attract, to pull toward
DRIVEL stupid talk; slobber
DROLL amusing in a wry, subtle way
DROSS waste produced during metal smelting; garbage
DUDGEON angry indignation
DULCET pleasant sounding, soothing to the ear
DUMB unable to speak
DUPE (n) fool, pawn
DUPE (v) to deceive, trick
DUPLICITY deception, dishonesty, double-dealing
DURABILITY strength, sturdiness
DURATION period of time that something lasts
DURESS threat of force or intimidation; imprisonment
DWINDLE to shrink or decrease
DYSPEPTIC suffering from indigestion; gloomy and irritable
E
EARTHY crude
EBB (v) to fade away, recede
EBULLIENT exhilarated, full of enthusiasm and high spirits
ECLECTIC selecting from various sources
ECSTATIC joyful
EDDY air or wind current
EDICT law, command, official public order
EDIFICE building
EDIFY to instruct morally and spiritually
EDITORIALIZE to express an opinion on an issue
EFFACE to erase or make illegible
EFFERVESCENT bubbly, lively
EFFICACIOUS effective, efficient
EFFIGY stuffed doll; likeness of a person
EFFLUVIA outpouring of gases or vapors
EFFRONTERY impudent boldness; audacity
EFFULGENT brilliantly shining
EFFUSIVE expressing emotion without restraint
EGOCENTRIC acting as if things are centered around oneself
EGREGIOUS conspicuously bad
EGRESS exit
ELATION exhilaration, joy
ELEGY mournful poem, usually about the dead
ELEVATED high in status, exalted
ELICIT to draw out, provoke
ELOQUENCE fluent and effective speech
ELUCIDATE to explain, clarify
EMACIATED skinny, scrawny, gaunt, esp. from hunger
EMANCIPATE to set free, liberate
EMBELLISH to ornament, make attractive with decoration or details; add details to a statement
EMBEZZLE to steal money in violation of a trust
EMBROIL to involve in; cause to fall into disorder
EMEND to correct a text
EMINENT celebrated, distinguished; outstanding, towering
EMOLLIENT having soothing qualities, esp. for skin
EMOTIVE appealing to or expressing emotion
EMPATHY identification with another’s feelings
EMULATE to copy, imitate
ENCHANT to charm or attract
ENCIPHER to translate a message into code
ENCOMIUM warm praise
ENCORE additional performance, often demanded by audience
ENCUMBER to hinder, burden, restrict motion
ENDEMIC belonging to a particular area, inherent
ENDOGAMOUS marrying within a specific group due to law or custom
ENDURANCE ability to withstand hardships
ENERVATE to weaken, sap strength from
ENGENDER to produce, cause, bring about
ENIGMATIC puzzling, inexplicable
ENJOIN to urge, order, command; forbid or prohibit, as by judicial order
ENMITY hostility, antagonism, ill-will
ENNUI boredom, lack of interest and energy
ENORMITY state of being gigantic or terrible
ENSCONCE to settle comfortably into a place
ENSHROUD to cover, enclose with a dark cover
ENTAIL to involve as a necessary result, necessitate
ENTHRALL to captivate, enchant, enslave
ENTICE to lure or tempt
ENTITY something with its own existence or form
ENTOMOLOGIST scientist who studies insects
ENTREAT to plead, beg
ENTRENCHED established solidly
ENUMERATE to count, list, itemize
ENUNCIATE to pronounce clearly
EON indefinitely long period of time
EPHEMERAL momentary, transient, fleeting
EPICURE person with refined taste in food and wine
EPIGRAM short, witty saying or poem
EPIGRAPH quotation at the beginning of a literary work
EPILOGUE concluding section of a literary work
EPITHET an abusive word or phrase
EPITOME representative of an entire group; summary
EPOCHAL very significant or influential; defining an epoch or time period
EQUANIMITY calmness, composure
EQUESTRIAN (n) one who rides on horseback
EQUINE relating to horses
EQUITABLE fair
EQUITY justice, fairness
EQUIVOCAL ambiguous, open to two interpretations
EQUIVOCATE to use vague or ambiguous language intentionally
ERADICATE to erase or wipe out
ERODE to diminish or destroy over a period of time
ERRANT straying, mistaken, roving
ERRATIC wandering and unpredictable
ERRONEOUS in error; mistaken
ERSATZ fake
ERUDITE learned, scholarly
ESCALATE to increase the intensity or scope of
ESCHEW to abstain from, avoid
ESOTERIC understood only by a learned few
ESPOUSE to support or advocate; to marry
ESTIMABLE admirable
ESTRANGE to alienate, keep at a distance
ESURIENT hungry, greedy
ETHEREAL not earthly, spiritual, delicate
ETHICAL moral, abiding by an accepted code of conduct
ETHOS beliefs or character of a group
ETYMOLOGY origin and history of a word; study of words
EULOGY high praise, often in a public speech
EUPHEMISM use of an inoffensive word or phrase in place of a more distasteful one
EUPHONY pleasant, harmonious sound
EUPHORIA feeling of well-being or happiness
EURYTHMICS art of harmonious bodily movement
EUTHANASIA mercy killing; intentional, easy and painless death
EVADE to avoid, dodge
EVANESCENT momentary, transitory, short-lived
EVICT to put out or force out
EVIDENT clear, able to be understood
EVINCE to show clearly, display, signify
EVOKE to inspire memories; to produce a reaction
EXACERBATE to aggravate, intensify the bad qualities of
EXALT to glorify, to elevate
EXASPERATION irritation
EXCERPT (n) selection from a book or play
EXCOMMUNICATE to bar from membership in the church
EXCORIATE to denounce
EXCRUCIATING agonizing, intensely painful
EXCULPATE to clear of blame or fault
EXECRABLE utterly detestable
EXEMPLARY serving as an example, commendable
EXHILARATION state of being energetic or filled with happiness
EXHORT to urge or incite by strong appeals
EXHUME to remove from a grave; uncover a secret
EXIGENT urgent; excessively demanding
EXONERATE to clear of blame
EXORBITANT extravagant, greater than reasonable
EXORCISE to expel evil spirits
EXOTIC foreign; romantic, excitingly strange
EXPANSIVE sweeping, comprehensive; tending to expand
EXPATIATE to wander; to discuss or describe at length
EXPATRIATE (n) one who lives outside one’s native land
EXPATRIATE (v) to drive someone from his or her native land
EXPEDIENT (adj) convenient, efficient, practical
EXPIATE to atone for, make amends for
EXPIRE to come to an end; die; breathe out
EXPLICABLE capable of being explained
EXPLICIT clearly defined, specific; forthright in expression
EXPLODE to debunk, disprove; blow up, burst
EXPONENT one who champions or advocates
EXPOUND to elaborate; to expand or increase
EXPUNGE to erase, eliminate completely
EXPURGATE to censor
EXTEMPORANEOUS unrehearsed, on the spur of the moment
EXTENUATE to lessen the seriousness, strength, or effect of
EXTINCTION end of a living thing or species
EXTOL to praise
EXTORT to obtain something by threats
EXTRANEOUS irrelevant, unrelated, unnecessary
EXTRAPOLATE to estimate
EXTREMITY outermost or farthest point
EXTRICATE to free from, disentangle, free
EXTRINSIC not inherent or essential, coming from without
EXTROVERT an outgoing person
EXUBERANT lively, happy, and full of good spirits
EXUDE to give off, ooze
EXULT to rejoice
F
FABRICATE to make or devise; construct
FABRICATED constructed, invented; faked, falsified
FACADE face, front; mask, superficial appearance
FACETIOUS witty in an inappropriate way
FACILE very easy
FACILITATE to aid, assist
FACILITY aptitude, ease in doing something
FACSIMILE an exact copy
FALLACIOUS wrong, unsound, illogical
FALLIBLE capable of failing
FALLOW uncultivated, unused
FAMINE extreme scarcity of food
FANATICISM extreme devotion to a cause
FARCICAL absurd, ludicrous
FASTIDIOUS careful with details
FATHOM (v) to measure the depth of, gauge; to understand
FATUOUS stupid; foolishly self-satisfied
FAULT break in a rock formation; mistake or error
FAWN (v) to flatter excessively, seek the favor of
FAZE to bother, upset, or disconcert
FEALTY intense loyalty
FEASIBLE possible, capable of being done
FECKLESS ineffective, careless, irresponsible
FECUND fertile, fruitful, productive
FEDERATION union of organizations; union of several states, each of which retains local power
FEIGN to pretend, give a false impression; to invent falsely
FEISTY excitable, easily drawn into quarrels
FELICITOUS suitable, appropriate; well-spoken
FELICITY feeling great happiness
FELL (v) to chop, cut down
FELL (adj) cruel
FERVID passionate, intense zealous
FETID foul-smelling, putrid
FETTER to bind, chain, confine
FEUD a prolonged quarrel between families
FEY otherworldly; doomed
FIASCO disaster, utter failure
FICKLE unreliable
FICTIVE fictional, imaginary
FIDELITY loyalty
FIENDISH excessively bad or cruel
FILCH to steal
FILIAL appropriate for a child
FILIBUSTER use of obstructive tactics in a legislative assembly to prevent adoption of a measure
FINESSE refinement or skill at a task or in a situation
FINICKY fussy, difficult to please
FISSION process of splitting into two parts
FISSURE a crack or break
FITFUL intermittent, irregular
FIXITY being fixed or stable
FLACCID limp, flabby, weak
FLAG to loose energy and strength
FLAGRANT outrageous, shameless
FLAIR a natural inclination towards something
FLAMBOYANT flashy, garish; exciting, dazzling
FLAMMABLE combustible, being easily burned
FLAUNT to show off
FLEDGLING young bird just learning to fly; beginner, novice
FLIPPANT disrespectful, casual
FLORA plants
FLORID gaudy, extremely ornate; ruddy, flushed
FLOUNDER to falter, waver; to muddle, struggle
FLOUT to treat contemptuously, scorn
FLUCTUATE to alternate, waver
FLURRIED to become agitated and confused
FLUSTER to agitate or confuse
FODDER raw material; feed for animals
FOIBLE minor weakness or character flaw
FOIL (v) to defeat, frustrate
FOIST to pass off as genuine
FOLIATE to grow, sprout leaves
FOMENT to arouse or incite
FORAGE to wander in search of food
FORBEARANCE patience, restraint, leniency
FORD (v) to cross a body of water at a shallow place
FOREBODING dark sense of evil to come
FORECLOSE to rule out; to seize debtor’s property for lack of payments
FORENSIC relating to legal proceedings; relating to debates
FORENSICS study of argumentation and debate
FORESTALL to prevent, delay; anticipate
FORETHOUGHT anticipation, foresight
FORFEND to prevent
FORGO to go without, refrain from
FORLORN dreary, deserted; unhappy; hopeless, despairing; pitiful in appearance
FORMULATE to conceive, devise; to draft, plan; to express, state
FORSAKE to abandon, withdraw from
FORSWEAR to repudiate, renounce, disclaim, reject
FORTE (n) strong point, something a person does well
FORTNIGHT two weeks
FORTUITOUS happening by luck, fortunate
FOSTER (v) to nourish, cultivate, promote
FOUNDATION groundwork, support; institution established by donation to aid a certain cause
FOUNDER (v) to fall helplessly; sink
FRACAS noisy dispute
FRACTIOUS unruly, rebellious
FRAGMENTATION division, separation into parts, disorganization
FRANK honest and straightforward
FRATRICIDE the killing of a brother or sister
FRAUD deception, hoax
FRAUDULENT deceitful, dishonest, unethical
FRAUGHT full of, accompanied by
FRENETIC wildly frantic, frenzied, hectic
FRENZIED feverishly fast, hectic, and confused
FRIVOLOUS petty, trivial; flippant, silly
FROND leaf
FRUGAL thrifty; cheap
FULMINATE to explode with anger
FULSOME excessive, overdone, sickeningly abundant
FUNEREAL mournful, appropriate to a funeral
FUROR rage, fury
FURTIVE secret, stealthy
FUSION process of merging things into one
G
GAINSAY to deny
GALL (n) bitterness; careless nerve
GALL (v) to exasperate and irritate
GALLANT a very fashionable young man
GAMBOL to dance or skip around playfully
GAME (adj) courageous
GARGANTUAN giant, tremendous
GARNER to gather and store
GARRULOUS very talkative
GAUCHE crude, socially awkward
GAUCHERIE a tactless or awkward act
GAUNT thin and bony
GAVEL mallet used for commanding attention
GENRE type, class, category
GENTEEL stylish, elegant in manner or appearance
GERIATRIC relating to old age or the process of aging
GERMINATE to begin to grow (as in a seed or idea)
GESTATION growth process from conception to birth
GIBE (v) to make heckling, taunting remarks
GIRTH distance around something
GLIB fluent in an insincere manner; offhand, casual
GLOBAL involving the entire world; relating to a whole
GLOWER to glare, stare angrily and intensely
GLUTTONY eating and drinking to excess
GNARL to make knotted, deform
GNOSTIC having to do with knowledge
GOAD to prod or urge
GOSSAMER something light, delicate, or tenuous
GOUGE scoop out; extort
GRADATION process occurring by regular degrees or stages; variation in color
GRANDILOQUENCE pompous talk, fancy but meaningless language
GRANDIOSE magnificent and imposing; exaggerated and pretentious
GRANULAR having a grainy texture
GRASP (v) to perceive and understand; to hold securely
GRATIS free, costing nothing
GRATUITOUS free, voluntary; unnecessary and unjustified
GRATUITY something given voluntarily, tip
GREGARIOUS outgoing, sociable
GRIEVOUS causing grief or sorrow; serious and distressing
GRIMACE facial expression showing pain or disgust
GRIMY dirty, filthy
GROSS (adj) obscene; blatant, flagrant
GROSS (n) total before deductions
GROVEL to humble oneself in a demeaning way
GRUBBY dirty, sloppy
GUILE trickery, deception
GULLIBLE easily deceived
GUSTATORY relating to sense of taste
GYRATE to move in a circular motion
H
HABITAT dwelling place
HACKNEYED worn out by overuse
HAIL to greet with praise
HALLOW to make holy; treat as sacred
HAMLET small village
HAPLESS unfortunate, having bad luck
HARANGUE a pompous speech
HARBINGER precursor, sign of something to come
HARDY robust, vigorous
HARMONY accord, tranquillity, agreement
HARROWING extremely distressing, terrifying
HASTEN to hurry, to speed up
HAUGHTY arrogant and condescending
HEADLONG recklessly
HEADSTRONG reckless; insisting on one’s own way
HEATHEN pagan; uncivilized and irreligious
HECTIC hasty, hurried, confused
HECTOR a bully, braggart
HEDONISM pursuit of pleasure as a goal
HEGEMONY leadership, domination, usually by a country
HEIGHTEN to raise
HEINOUS shocking, wicked, terrible
HEMICYCLE semicircular form or structure
HEMORRHAGE (n) heavy bleeding
HEMORRHAGE (v) to bleed heavily
HERETICAL opposed to an established religious orthodoxy
HERMETIC tightly sealed
HETERODOX unorthodox, not widely accepted
HETEROGENEOUS composed of unlike parts, different, diverse
HEW to cut with an ax
HIATUS a gap or a break
HIDEBOUND excessively rigid; dry and stiff
HINDER to hamper
HINDSIGHT perception of events after they happen
HINTERLAND wilderness
HOARY very old; whitish or gray from age
HOLISTIC emphasizing importance of the whole and interdependence of its parts
HOLOCAUST widespread destruction, usually by fire
HOMAGE public honor and respect
HOMOGENEOUS composed of identical parts
HOMONYM word identical in pronunciation but different in meaning
HONE to sharpen
HONOR (v) to praise, glorify, pay tribute to
HUMANE merciful, kindly
HUSBAND (v) to farm; manage carefully and thriftily
HUTCH pen or coop for animals; shack, shanty
HYDRATE to add water to
HYGIENIC clean, sanitary
HYMN religious song, usually of praise or thanks
HYPERBOLE purposeful exaggeration for effect
HYPERVENTILATE to breathe abnormally fast
HYPOCHONDRIA unfounded belief that one is often ill
HYPOCRITE person claiming beliefs or virtues he or she doesn’t really possess
HYPOTHERMIA abnormally low body temperature
HYPOTHESIS assumption subject to proof
HYPOTHETICAL theoretical, speculative
I
ICONOCLAST one who attacks traditional beliefs
IDEALISM pursuit of noble goals
IDIOSYNCRASY peculiarity of temperament, eccentricity
IGNOBLE dishonorable, not noble in character
IGNOMINIOUS disgraceful and dishonorable
IGNORAMUS an ignorant person
ILK type or kind
ILLICIT illegal, improper
ILLIMITABLE limitless
ILLUSORY unreal, deceptive
ILLUSTRIOUS famous, renowned
IMBUE to infuse; dye, wet, moisten
IMMACULATE spotless; free from error
IMMATERIAL extraneous, inconsequential, nonessential; not consisting of matter
IMMENSE enormous, huge
IMMERSE to bathe, dip; to engross, preoccupy
IMMOBILE not moveable; still
IMMUNE exempt; protected from harm or disease; unresponsive to
IMMUNOLOGICAL relating to immune system
IMMURE to imprison
IMMUTABLE unchangeable, invariable
IMPAIR to damage, injure
IMPASSE blocked path, dilemma with no solution
IMPASSIONED with passion
IMPASSIVE showing no emotion
IMPEACH to charge with misdeeds in public office; accuse
IMPECCABLE flawless, without fault
IMPECUNIOUS poor, having no money
IMPEDIMENT barrier, obstacle; speech disorder
IMPERATIVE essential; mandatory
IMPERIOUS arrogantly self-assured, domineering, overbearing
IMPERTINENT rude
IMPERTURBABLE not capable of being disturbed
IMPERVIOUS impossible to penetrate; incapable of being affected
IMPETUOUS quick to act without thinking
IMPIOUS not devout in religion
IMPLACABLE inflexible, incapable of being pleased
IMPLANT to set securely or deeply; to instill
IMPLAUSIBLE improbable, inconceivable
IMPLICATE to involve in a crime, incriminate
IMPLICIT implied, not directly expressed
IMPOLITIC unwise
IMPORTUNE to ask repeatedly, beg
IMPOSE to inflict, force upon
IMPOSING dignified, grand
IMPOTENT powerless, ineffective, lacking strength
IMPOUND to seize and confine
IMPOVERISH to make poor or bankrupt
IMPRECATION curse
IMPREGNABLE totally safe from attack, able to resist defeat
IMPRESSIONABLE easily influenced or affected
IMPROMPTU spontaneous, without rehearsal
IMPROVIDENT without planning or foresight, negligent
IMPRUDENT unwise
IMPUDENT arrogant and rude
IMPUGN to call into question, attack verbally
IMPULSE sudden tendency, inclination
IMPULSIVE spontaneous, unpredictable
INADVERTENTLY unintentionally
INANE foolish, silly, lacking significance
INAUGURATE to begin or start officially; to induct into office
INCANDESCENT shining brightly
INCARCERATE to put in jail; to confine
INCARCERATION imprisonment
INCARNADINE blood-red in color
INCARNATE having bodily form
INCENDIARY combustible, flammable, burning easily
INCENSE (v) to infuriate, enrage
INCEPTION beginning
INCESSANT continuous, never ceasing
INCHOATE just begun; disorganized
INCIPIENT beginning to exist or appear; in an initial stage
INCISIVE perceptive, penetrating
INCLINATION tendency towards
INCLUSIVE comprehensive, all-encompassing
INCOGNITO in disguise, concealing one’s identity
INCOMMUNICADO lacking a means to communicate
INCONCEIVABLE impossible, unthinkable
INCONGRUOUS incompatible, not harmonious
INCONSEQUENTIAL unimportant, trivial
INCONTROVERTIBLE unquestionable, beyond dispute
INCORRIGIBLE incapable of being corrected
INCREDULOUS skeptical, doubtful
INCULCATE to teach, impress in the mind
INCULPATE to blame, charge with a crime
INCUMBENT (adj) holding a specified office, often political; required, obligatory
INCURSION sudden invasion
INDEFATIGABLE never tired
INDEFENSIBLE inexcusable, unforgivable
INDELIBLE permanent, not erasable
INDENTURE bound to another by contract
INDICATIVE showing or pointing out, suggestive of
INDICT to accuse formally, charge with a crime
INDIGENOUS native, occurring naturally in an area
INDIGENT very poor
INDIGNANT angry, incensed, offended
INDISPUTABLE not disputed, unquestioned
INDOLENT habitually lazy, idle
INDOMITABLE fearless, unconquerable
INDUBITABLE unquestionable
INDUCE to persuade; bring about
INDUCT to place ceremoniously in office
INDULGE to give in to a craving or desire
INDUSTRY business or trade; diligence, energy
INEBRIATED drunk, intoxicated
INEPT clumsy, awkward
INERT unable to move, tending to inactivity
INESTIMABLE too great to be estimated
INEVITABLE certain, unavoidable
INEXORABLE inflexible, unyielding
INEXTRICABLE incapable of being disentangled
INFALLIBLE incapable of making a mistake
INFAMY reputation for bad deeds
INFANTILE childish, immature
INFATUATED strongly or foolishly attached to, inspired with foolish passion, overly in love
INFER to conclude, deduce
INFERNAL hellish, diabolical
INFILTRATE to pass secretly into enemy territory
INFINITESIMAL extremely tiny
INFIRMITY disease, ailment
INFRINGE to encroach, trespass; to transgress, violate
INFURIATE to anger, provoke, outrage
INFURIATING provoking anger or outrage
INGENIOUS original, clever, inventive
INGENUOUS straightforward, open; naive and unsophisticated
INGLORIOUS lacking fame or honor, shameful
INGRAINED an innate quality, deep-seated
INGRATE ungrateful person
INGRATIATE to bring oneself purposely into another’s good graces
INGRESS entrance
INHIBIT to hold back, prevent, restrain
INIMICAL hostile, unfriendly
INIQUITY sin, evil act
INITIATE to begin, introduce; to enlist, induct
INJECT to force into; to introduce into conversation
INJUNCTION command, order
INJURIOUS causing injury
INKLING hint; vague idea
INNATE natural, inborn
INNATENESS state of being natural or inborn
INNOCUOUS harmless; inoffensive
INNOVATE to invent, modernize, revolutionize
INNUENDO indirect and subtle criticism, insinuation
INNUMERABLE too many to be counted
INOFFENSIVE harmless, innocent
INOPERABLE not operable; incurable by surgery
INQUEST investigation; court or legal proceeding
INQUISITIVE curious
INSATIABLE never satisfied
INSCRUTABLE impossible to understand fully
INSENTIENT unfeeling, unconscious
INSIDIOUS sly, treacherous, devious
INSINUATE to suggest, say indirectly, imply
INSIPID bland, lacking flavor; lacking excitement
INSOLENT insulting and arrogant
INSOLUBLE not able to be solved or explained
INSOLVENT bankrupt, unable to pay one’s debts
INSTIGATE to incite, urge, agitate
INSUBSTANTIAL modest, insignificant
INSUFFICIENCY lacking in something
INSULAR isolated, detached
INSUPERABLE insurmountable, unconquerable
INSURGENT (adj) rebellious, insubordinate
INSURRECTION rebellion
INTEGRAL central, indispensable
INTEGRATED unified
INTEGRITY decency, honest; wholeness
INTEMPERATE not moderate
INTER to bury
INTERDICT to forbid, prohibit
INTERJECT to interpose, insert
INTERLOCUTOR someone taking part in a dialog
INTERLOPER trespasser; meddler in others’ affairs
INTERMINABLE endless
INTERMITTENT starting and stopping
INTERNECINE deadly to both sides
INTERPOLATE to insert; change by adding new words or material
INTERPOSE to insert; to intervene
INTERREGNUM interval between reigns
INTERROGATE to question formally
INTERSECT to divide by passing through or across
INTERSPERSE to distribute among, mix with
INTERSTICE a space between things
INTIMATION clue, suggestion
INTRACTABLE not easily managed
INTRAMURAL within an institution like a school
INTRANSIGENT uncompromising, refusing to be reconciled
INTREPID fearless
INTRIGUED interested, curious
INTRINSIC inherent, internal
INTROSPECTIVE contemplating one’s own thoughts and feelings
INTROVERT someone given to self-analysis
INTRUSION trespass, invasion of another’s privacy
INTUITIVE instinctive, untaught
INUNDATE to cover with water; overwhelm
INURE to harden; accustom; become used to
INVALIDATE to negate or nullify
INVARIABLE constant, not changing
INVECTIVE verbal abuse
INVEIGH protest strongly
INVESTITURE ceremony conferring authority
INVETERATE confirmed, long-standing, deeply rooted
INVIDIOUS likely to provoke ill will, offensive
INVINCIBLE invulnerable, unbeatable
INVIOLABLE safe from violation or assault
INVOKE to call upon, request help
IOTA very tiny amount
IRASCIBLE easily angered
IRIDESCENT showing many colors
IRRESOLVABLE unable to be resolved; not analyzable
IRREVERENT disrespectful
IRREVOCABLE conclusive, irreversible
ITINERANT wandering from place to place, unsettled
ITINERARY route of a traveler’s journey
J
JADED tired by excess or overuse; slightly cynical
JANGLING clashing, jarring; harshly unpleasant (in sound)
JARGON nonsensical talk; specialized language
JAUNDICE yellowish discoloration of skin
JAUNDICED affected by jaundice; prejudiced or embittered
JETTISON to cast off, throw cargo overboard
JIBE to shift suddenly from one side to the other
JINGOISM belligerent support of one’s country
JOCULAR jovial, playful, humorous
JUBILEE special anniversary
JUDICIOUS sensible, showing good judgment
JUGGERNAUT huge force destroying everything in its path
JUNCTURE point where two things are joined
JURISPRUDENCE philosophy of law
JUVENILE young or childish acting
JUXTAPOSITION side-by-side placement
K
KEEN having a sharp edge; intellectually sharp, perceptive
KERNEL innermost, essential part; seed grain, often in a shell
KEYNOTE note or tone on which a musical key is founded; main idea of a speech, program, etc.
KINDLE to set fire to or ignite; excite or inspire
KINETIC relating to motion; characterized by movement
KISMET fate
KNELL sound of a funeral bell; omen of death or failure
KUDOS fame, glory, honor
L
LABYRINTH maze
LACERATION cut or wound
LACHRYMOSE tearful
LACKADAISICAL idle, lazy; apathetic, indifferent
LACKLUSTER dull
LACONIC using few words
LAGGARD dawdler, loafer, lazy person
LAMBASTE disapprove angrily
LAMENT (v) to deplore, grieve
LAMPOON (v) to attack with satire, mock harshly
LANGUID lacking energy, indifferent, slow
LANGUOR listlessness
LAP (v) to drink using the tongue; to wash against
LAPIDARY relating to precious stones
LARCENY theft of property
LARDER place where food is stored
LARGESS generosity; gift
LARYNX organ containing vocal cords
LASCIVIOUS lewd, lustful
LASSITUDE lethargy, sluggishness
LATENT present but hidden; potential
LATITUDE freedom of action or choice
LAUDABLE deserving of praise
LAVISH to give plentiful amounts of
LAXITY carelessness
LEERY suspicious
LEGERDEMAIN trickery
LEGIBLE readable
LEGISLATE to decree, mandate, make laws
LEGITIMATE adhering to the law, rightful
LENIENT easygoing, permissive
LETHARGY indifferent inactivity
LEVITATE to rise in the air or cause to rise
LEVITY humor, frivolity, gaiety
LEXICON dictionary, list of words
LIBERAL (adj) tolerant, broad-minded; generous, lavish
LIBERATION freedom, emancipation
LIBERTARIAN one who believes in unrestricted freedom
LIBERTINE one without moral restraint
LIBIDINOUS lustful
LICENSE freedom to act
LICENTIOUS immoral; unrestrained by society
LIEN right to possess and sell the property of a debtor
LIMPID clear and simple; serene; transparent
LINEAGE ancestry
LINGUISTICS study of language
LINIMENT medicinal liquid used externally to ease pain
LIONIZE to treat as a celebrity
LISSOME easily flexed, limber, agile
LISTLESS lacking energy and enthusiasm
LITERAL word for word; upholding the exact meaning of a word
LITERATE able to read and write; well-read and educated
LITHE moving and bending with ease; graceful
LITIGATION lawsuit
LIVID discolored from a bruise; reddened with anger
LOATHE to abhor, despise, hate
LOCOMOTION movement from place to place
LODGED fixed in one position
LOFTY noble, elevated in position
LOGO corporate symbol
LOITER to stand around idly
LOQUACIOUS talkative
LOW (v) to make a sound like a cow, moo
LUCID clear and easily understood
LUDICROUS laughable, ridiculous
LUGUBRIOUS sorrowful, mournful
LULL to soothe
LUMBER (v) to move slowly and awkwardly
LUMINARY bright object; celebrity; source of inspiration
LUMINOUS bright, brilliant, glowing
LUNAR relating to the moon
LURID harshly shocking, sensational; glowing
LURK to prowl, sneak
LUSCIOUS very good-tasting
LUXURIANCE elegance, lavishness
LYRICAL suitable for poetry and song; expressing feeling
M
MACABRE gruesome, producing horror
MACHINATION plot or scheme
MACROBIOTICS art of prolonging life by special diet of organic, nonmeat substances
MACROCOSM system regarded as an entity with subsystems
MAELSTROM whirlpool; turmoil; agitated state of mind
MAGNANIMOUS generous, noble in spirit
MAGNATE powerful or influential person
MAGNITUDE extent, greatness of size
MAINSTAY chief support
MALADROIT clumsy, tactless
MALADY illness
MALAPROPISM humorous misuse of a word
MALCONTENT discontented person, one who holds a grudge
MALEDICTION curse
MALEFACTOR evil-doer; culprit
MALEVOLENT ill-willed; causing evil or harm to others
MALFUNCTION (n) breakdown, failure
MALFUNCTION (v) to fail to work
MALICE animosity, spite, hatred
MALINGER to evade responsibility by pretending to be ill
MALLEABLE capable of being shaped
MALNUTRITION undernourishment
MALODOROUS foul-smelling
MANDATORY necessary, required
MANIFEST (adj) obvious
MANIFOLD diverse, varied, comprised of many parts
MANNERED artificial or stilted in character
MANUAL (adj) hand-operated; physical
MANUMISSION release from slavery
MAR to damage, deface; spoil
MARGINAL barely sufficient
MARITIME relating to the sea or sailing
MARTIAL warlike, pertaining to the military
MARTINET strict disciplinarian, one who rigidly follows rules
MARTYR person dying for his or her beliefs
MASOCHIST one who enjoys pain or humiliation
MASQUERADE disguise; action that conceals the truth
MATERIALISM preoccupation with material things
MATRICULATE to enroll as a member of a college or university
MATRILINEAL tracing ancestry through mother’s line rather than father’s
MAUDLIN overly sentimental
MAVERICK a person who resists adherence to a group
MAWKISH sickeningly sentimental
MEAGER scanty, sparse
MEANDER to wander aimlessly without direction
MEANINGFUL significant
MEDDLER person interfering in others’ affairs
MEDIEVAL relating to the Middle Ages
MEGALITH huge stone used in prehistoric structures
MEGALOMANIA mental state with delusions of wealth and power
MELANCHOLY sadness, depression
MELODIOUS having a pleasing melody
MELODY pleasing musical sounds; tune
MENAGERIE various animals kept together for exhibition
MENDACIOUS dishonest
MENDACITY a lie, falsehood
MENDICANT beggar
MENTOR experienced teacher and wise adviser
MERCENARY (adj) motivated only by greed
MERCENARY (n) soldier for hire in foreign countries
MERCURIAL quick, shrewd, and unpredictable
MERETRICIOUS gaudy, falsely attractive
MERIDIAN circle passing through the two poles of the earth
MERITORIOUS deserving reward or praise
METAMORPHOSIS change, transformation
METAPHOR figure of speech comparing two different things
METICULOUS extremely careful, fastidious, painstaking
METRONOME time-keeping device used in music
METTLE courageousness; endurance
MICROBE microorganism
MICROCOSM tiny system used as analogy for larger system
MIGRATORY wandering from place to place with the seasons
MILITATE to operate against, work against
MILLENNIUM one thousand years
MINATORY menacing, threatening
MINIMAL smallest in amount, least possible
MINUSCULE very small
MIRTH frivolity, gaiety, laughter
MISANTHROPE person who hates human beings
MISAPPREHEND to misunderstand, fail to know
MISCONSTRUE to misunderstand, fail to discover
MISCREANT one who behaves criminally
MISERLINESS extreme stinginess
MISGIVING apprehension, doubt, sense of foreboding
MISHAP accident; misfortune
MISNOMER an incorrect name or designation
MISSIVE note or letter
MITIGATE to soften, or make milder
MNEMONIC relating to memory; designed to assist memory
MOBILITY ease of movement
MOCK (v) to deride, ridicule
MODERATE (adj) reasonable, not extreme
MODERATE (v) to make less excessive, restrain; regulate
MODICUM a small amount
MOLLIFY to calm or make less severe
MOLLUSK sea animal with a soft body
MOLT (v) to shed hair, skin, or an outer layer periodically
MOMENTOUS important
MONASTIC extremely plain or secluded, as in a monastery
MONOCHROMATIC having one color
MONOGAMY custom of marriage to one person at a time
MONOLITH large block of stone
MONOLOGUE dramatic speech performed by one actor
MONOTONY lack of variation; wearisome sameness
MONTAGE composite picture
MOOT debatable; previously decided
MORBID gruesome; relating to disease; abnormally gloomy
MORDACIOUS caustic, biting
MORDANT sarcastic
MORES customs or manners
MORIBUND dying, decaying
MOROSE gloomy, sullen, or surly
MORSEL small bit of food
MOTE small particle, speck
MOTLEY many-colored; composed of diverse parts
MOTTLE to mark with spots
MULTIFACETED having many parts, many-sided
MULTIFARIOUS diverse
MUNDANE worldly; commonplace
MUNIFICENT generous
MUNITIONS ammunition
MUTABILITY changeability
MUTE unable to speak
MYOPIC near-sighted
MYRIAD immense number, multitude
N
NADIR lowest point
NAIVE lacking sophistication
NAIVETÉ a lack of worldly wisdom
NARRATIVE account, story
NASCENT starting to develop, coming into existence
NATAL relating to birth
NEBULOUS vague, cloudy
NECROMANCY black magic
NEFARIOUS vicious, evil
NEGLIGENT careless, inattentive
NEGLIGIBLE not worth considering
NEMESIS a formidable, often victorious opponent
NEOLOGISM new word or expression
NEONATE newborn child
NEOPHYTE novice, beginner
NETHER located under or below
NETTLE (v) to irritate
NEUTRALITY disinterest, impartiality
NEUTRALIZE to balance, offset
NICETY elegant or delicate feature; minute distinction
NICHE recess in a wall; best position for something
NIGGARDLY stingy
NIGGLING trifle, petty
NIHILISM belief that existence and all traditional values are meaningless
NOBLE illustrious, moral
NOCTURNAL pertaining to night; active at night
NOISOME stinking, putrid
NOMADIC moving from place to place
NOMENCLATURE terms used in a particular science or discipline
NOMINAL existing in name only; negligible
NON SEQUITUR conclusion not following from apparent evidence
NONCHALANT unconcerned, indifferent
NONDESCRIPT lacking interesting or distinctive qualities; dull
NONENTITY an insignificant person
NOTORIETY fame; unfavorable fame
NOVICE apprentice, beginner
NOVITIATE period of being a beginner or novice
NOXIOUS harmful, unwholesome
NUANCE shade of meaning
NULLIFY to make legally invalid; to counteract the effect of
NUMISMATICS coin collecting
NUPTIAL relating to marriage
NUTRITIVE relating to nutrition or health
O
OBDURATE stubborn
OBEISANCE a show of respect or submission
OBFUSCATE to confuse, obscure
OBJURGATE scold
OBLIGING accommodating, agreeable
OBLIQUE indirect, evasive; misleading, devious
OBLITERATE demolish completely, wipe out
OBLIVIOUS unaware, inattentive
OBLOQUY abusive language; ill repute
OBSCURE (adj) dim, unclear; not well known
OBSCURITY place or thing that’s hard to perceive
OBSEQUIOUS overly submissive, brownnosing
OBSEQUY funeral ceremony
OBSESSIVE preoccupying, all-consuming
OBSOLETE no longer in use
OBSTINATE stubborn
OBSTREPEROUS troublesome, boisterous, unruly
OBTRUSIVE pushy, too conspicuous
OBTUSE insensitive, stupid, dull
OBVIATE to make unnecessary; to anticipate and prevent
OCCLUDE to shut, block
ODIOUS hateful, contemptible
OFFICIOUS too helpful, meddlesome
OFFSHOOT branch
OMINOUS menacing, threatening, indicating misfortune
OMNIPOTENT having unlimited power
OMNISCIENT having infinite knowledge
OMNIVOROUS eating everything; absorbing everything
ONEROUS burdensome
ONTOLOGY theory about the nature of existence
OPALESCENT iridescent, displaying colors
OPAQUE impervious to light; difficult to understand
OPERATIVE functioning, working
OPINE to express an opinion
OPPORTUNE appropriate, fitting
OPPORTUNIST one who takes advantage of circumstances
OPPROBRIOUS disgraceful, contemptuous
OPTIMUM the most favorable degree
OPULENCE wealth
ORACLE person who foresees the future and gives advice
ORATION lecture, formal speech
ORATOR lecturer, speaker
ORB spherical body; eye
ORCHESTRATE to arrange music for performance; to coordinate, organize
ORDAIN to make someone a priest or minister; to order
ORIFICE an opening
ORNITHOLOGIST scientist who studies birds
OROTUND pompous
OSCILLATE to move back and forth
OSSIFY to turn to bone; to become rigid
OSTENSIBLE apparent
OSTENTATIOUS showy
OSTRACISM exclusion, temporary banishment
OUSTER expulsion, ejection
OVERABUNDANCE excess, surfeit
OVERSTATE to embellish, exaggerate
OVERT in the open, obvious
OVERTURE musical introduction; proposal, offer
OVERWEENING arrogant
OVERWROUGHT agitated, overdone
P
PACIFIC calm, peaceful
PACIFIST one opposed to war
PACIFY to restore calm, bring peace
PAEAN a song of praise or thanksgiving
PALATIAL like a palace, magnificent
PALAVER idle talk
PALEONTOLOGY study of past geological eras through fossil remains
PALETTE board for mixing paints; range of colors
PALISADE fence made up of stakes
PALL (n) covering that darkens or obscures; coffin
PALL (v) to lose strength or interest
PALLIATE to make less serious, ease
PALLID lacking color or liveliness
PALPABLE obvious, real, tangible
PALPITATION trembling, shaking, irregular beating
PALTRY pitifully small or worthless
PANACEA cure-all
PANACHE flamboyance, verve
PANDEMIC spread over a whole area or country
PANEGYRIC elaborate praise; formal hymn of praise
PANOPLY impressive array
PANORAMA broad view; comprehensive picture
PARADIGM ideal example, model
PARADOX contradiction, incongruity; dilemma, puzzle
PARADOXICAL self-contradictory but true
PARAGON model of excellence or perfection
PARAMOUNT supreme, dominant, primary
PARAPHRASE to reword, usually in simpler terms
PARASITE person or animal that lives at another’s expense
PARCH to dry or shrivel
PARE to trim
PARIAH outcast
PARITY equality
PARLEY discussion, usually between enemies
PAROCHIAL of limited scope or outlook, provincial
PARODY humorous imitation
PAROLE conditional release of a prisoner
PARRY to ward off or deflect
PARSIMONY stinginess
PARTISAN (adj) biased in favor of
PARTISAN (n) strong supporter
PASTICHE piece of literature or music imitating other works
PATENT (adj) obvious, unconcealed
PATENT (n) official document giving exclusive right to sell an invention
PATERNITY fatherhood; descent from father’s ancestors
PATHOGENIC causing disease
PATHOS pity, compassion
PATRICIAN aristocrat
PATRICIDE murder of one’s father
PATRIMONY inheritance or heritage derived from one’s father
PATRONIZE to condescend to, disparage; to buy from
PAUCITY scarcity, lack
PAUPER very poor person
PAVILION tent or light building used for shelter or exhibitions
PECCADILLO minor sin or offense
PECULATION theft of money or goods
PEDAGOGUE teacher
PEDANT one who pays undue attention to book learning and rules; one who displays learning ostentatiously
PEDESTRIAN (adj) commonplace
PEDIATRICIAN doctor specializing in children and their ailments
PEDIMENT triangular gable on a roof or facade
PEER (n) contemporary, equal, match
PEERLESS unequaled
PEJORATIVE having bad connotations; disparaging
PELLUCID transparent; translucent; easily understood
PENANCE voluntary suffering to repent for a wrong
PENCHANT inclination
PENDING (prep) during, while awaiting
PENITENT expressing sorrow for sins or offenses, repentant
PENSIVE thoughtful
PENULTIMATE next to last
PENUMBRA partial shadow
PENURY extreme poverty
PERAMBULATE walk about
PERCIPIENT discerning, able to perceive
PERDITION complete and utter loss; damnation
PEREGRINATE to wander from place to place
PEREMPTORY imperative; dictatorial
PERENNIAL present throughout the years; persistent
PERFIDIOUS faithless, disloyal, untrustworthy
PERFUNCTORY done in a routine way; indifferent
PERIHELION point in orbit nearest to the sun
PERIPATETIC moving from place to place
PERIPHRASTIC containing too many words
PERJURE to tell a lie under oath
PERMEABLE penetrable
PERNICIOUS very harmful
PERPETUAL endless, lasting
PERPETUITY continuing forever
PERPLEXING puzzling, bewildering
PERSONIFICATION act of attributing human qualities to objects or abstract qualities
PERSPICACIOUS shrewd, astute, keen-witted
PERT lively and bold
PERTINACIOUS persistent, stubborn
PERTINENT applicable, appropriate
PERTURBATION disturbance
PERUSAL close examination
PERVASIVE present throughout
PERVERT (v) to cause to change in immoral way; to misuse
PESTILENCE epidemic, plague
PETTISH fretful
PETULANCE rudeness, peevishness
PHALANX massed group of soldiers, people, or things
PHILANDERER pursuer of casual love affairs
PHILANTHROPY love of humanity; generosity to worthy causes
PHILISTINE narrow-minded person, someone lacking appreciation for art or culture
PHILOLOGY study of words
PHLEGM coldness or indifference
PHLEGMATIC calm in temperament; sluggish
PHOBIA anxiety, horror
PHOENIX mythical, immortal bird that lives for 500 years, burns itself to death, and rises from its ashes
PHONETICS study of speech sounds
PHONIC relating to sound
PICAYUNE petty, of little value
PIDDLING trivial
PIETY devoutness
PILFER to steal
PILLAGE to loot, especially during a war
PILLORY ridicule and abuse
PINNACLE peak, highest point of development
PIOUS dedicated, devout, extremely religious
PIQUE fleeting feeling of hurt pride
PITHY profound, substantial; concise, succinct, to the point
PITTANCE meager amount or wage
PLACATE to soothe or pacify
PLACID calm
PLAGIARIST one who steals words or ideas
PLAINTIFF injured person in a lawsuit
PLAINTIVE expressing sorrow
PLAIT to braid
PLANGENT loud sound; wailing sound
PLASTIC flexible; pliable
PLATITUDE stale, overused expression
PLAUDIT applause
PLEBEIAN crude, vulgar; low-class
PLENITUDE abundance, plenty
PLETHORA excess, overabundance
PLIANT pliable, yielding
PLUCK to pull strings on musical instrument
PLUCKY courageous, spunky
PLUMMET to fall, plunge
PLURALISTIC including a variety of groups
PLY (v) to use diligently; to engage; to join together
PNEUMATIC relating to air; worked by compressed air
POACH to steal game or fish; cook in boiling liquid
PODIUM platform or lectern for orchestra conductors or speakers
POIGNANT emotionally moving
POLAR relating to a geographic pole; exhibiting contrast
POLARIZE to tend towards opposite extremes
POLEMIC controversy, argument; verbal attack
POLITIC shrewd and practical; diplomatic
POLYGLOT speaker of many languages
POMPOUS self-important
PONDEROUS weighty, heavy, large
PONTIFICATE to speak in a pretentious manner
PORE (v) to study closely or meditatively
POROUS full of holes, permeable to liquids
PORTENT omen
PORTLY stout, dignified
POSIT to put in position; to suggest an idea
POSTERIOR bottom, rear
POSTERITY future generations; all of a person’s descendants
POTABLE drinkable
POTENTATE monarch or ruler with great power
POVERTY lacking money or possessions
PRAGMATIC practical; moved by facts rather than abstract ideals
PRATTLE meaningless, foolish talk
PRECARIOUS uncertain
PRECEPT principle; law
PRECIPICE edge, steep overhang
PRECIPITATE (adj) sudden and unexpected
PRECIPITATE (v) to throw down from a height; to cause to happen
PRECIPITOUS hasty, quickly, with too little caution
PRÉCIS short summary of facts
PRECISION state of being precise; exactness
PRECLUDE to rule out
PRECOCIOUS unusually advanced at an early age
PRECURSOR forerunner, predecessor
PREDATOR one that preys on others, destroyer, plunderer
PREDESTINE to decide in advance
PREDICAMENT difficult situation
PREDICATE (v) to found or base on
PREDICTIVE relating to prediction, indicative of the future
PREDILECTION preference, liking
PREDISPOSITION tendency, inclination
PREEMINENT celebrated, distinguished
PREFACE introduction to a book; introductory remarks to a speech
PREMEDITATE to consider, plan beforehand
PREMONITION forewarning; presentiment
PREPONDERANCE majority in number; dominance
PREPOSSESSING attractive, engaging, appealing
PREPOSTEROUS absurd, illogical
PRESAGE to foretell, indicate in advance
PRESCIENT having foresight
PRESCRIBE to set down a rule; to recommend a treatment
PRESENTIMENT premonition, sense of foreboding
PRESTIDIGITATION sleight of hand
PRESUMPTUOUS rude, improperly bold
PRETENTIOUS showy, self-important
PRETEXT excuse, pretended reason
PREVALENT widespread
PREVARICATE to lie, evade the truth
PRIMEVAL ancient, primitive
PRIMORDIAL original, existing from the beginning
PRISTINE untouched, uncorrupted
PRIVATION lack of usual necessities or comforts
PROBITY honesty, high-mindedness
PROCLIVITY tendency, inclination
PROCRASTINATION putting off something that must be done
PROCRASTINATOR one who continually and unjustifiably postpones
PROCURE to obtain
PRODIGAL wasteful, extravagant, lavish
PRODIGIOUS vast, enormous, extraordinary
PROFANE impure; contrary to religion; sacrilegious
PROFICIENT expert, skilled in a certain subject
PROFLIGATE corrupt, degenerate
PROFUNDITY great depth
PROFUSE lavish, extravagant
PROGENITOR originator, forefather, ancestor in a direct line
PROGENY offspring, children
PROGNOSIS prediction of disease outcome; any prediction
PROGNOSTICATE to predict
PROGRESSIVE favoring progress or change; moving forward
PROLIFERATION propagation, reproduction; enlargement, expansion
PROLIFIC productive, fertile
PROLIX tedious; wordy
PROLOGUE introductory section of a literary work or play
PROMONTORY piece of land or rock higher than its surroundings
PROMULGATE to make known publicly
PROPAGATE to breed
PROPENSITY inclination, tendency
PROPINQUITY nearness
PROPITIATE to win over, appease
PROPITIOUS favorable, advantageous
PROPONENT advocate, defender, supporter
PROPRIETY appropriateness
PROSAIC relating to prose; dull, commonplace
PROSCRIBE to condemn; to forbid, outlaw
PROSE ordinary language used in everyday speech
PROSECUTOR person who initiates a legal action or suit
PROSELYTIZE to convert to a particular belief or religion
PROSTRATE lying face downward, lying flat on the ground
PROTAGONIST main character in a play or story, hero
PROTEAN readily assuming different forms or characters
PROTESTATION declaration
PROTOCOL ceremony and manners observed by diplomats
PROTRACT to prolong, draw out, extend
PROTRUSION something that sticks out
PROVIDENT prudent, frugal
PROVIDENTIAL prudent, lucky
PROVINCIAL rustic, unsophisticated, limited in scope
PROVOCATION cause, incitement to act or respond
PROWESS bravery, skill
PROXIMITY nearness
PROXY power to act as substitute for another
PRUDE one who is excessively proper or modest
PRUDENT careful, cautious
PRURIENT lustful, exhibiting lewd desires
PRY to intrude into; force open
PSEUDONYM pen name; fictitious or borrowed name
PSYCHIC (adj) having to do with the mind; perceptive of nonmaterial, spiritual forces
PUDGY chubby, overweight
PUERILE childish, immature, silly
PUGILISM boxing
PUGNACIOUS quarrelsome, eager and ready to fight
PULCHRITUDE beauty
PULVERIZE to pound, crush, or grind into powder; destroy
PUMMEL to pound, beat
PUNCTILIOUS careful in observing rules of behavior or ceremony
PUNDIT an authority or critic
PUNGENT strong or sharp in smell or taste
PUNITIVE having to do with punishment
PURGATION process of cleansing, purification
PURGE (v) to cleanse or free from impurities
PURITANICAL adhering to a rigid moral code
PURPORT to profess, suppose, claim
PUSILLANIMOUS cowardly
PUTRID rotten
Q
QUACK (n) faker; one who falsely claims to have medical skill
QUADRILATERAL four-sided polygon
QUADRUPED animal having four feet
QUAFF to drink heartily
QUAGMIRE marsh; difficult situation
QUALIFY to provide with needed skills; modify, limit
QUANDARY dilemma, difficulty
QUARANTINE isolation period, originally 40 days, to prevent spread of disease
QUATERNARY consisting of or relating to four units or members
QUELL to crush or subdue
QUERULOUS inclined to complain, irritable
QUERY (n) question
QUIBBLE to argue about insignificant and irrelevant details
QUICKEN to hasten, arouse, excite
QUIESCENCE inactivity, stillness
QUIESCENT inactive, at rest
QUINTESSENCE most typical example; concentrated essence
QUIVER (v) to shake slightly, tremble, vibrate
QUIXOTIC overly idealistic, impractical
QUOTIDIAN occurring daily; commonplace
R
RACONTEUR witty, skillful storyteller
RADICAL (adj) fundamental; drastic
RAGING violent, wild
RAIL (v) to scold with bitter or abusive language
RAILLERY lighthearted jesting
RALLY (v) to assemble; recover, recuperate
RAMBLE (v) to roam, wander; to babble, digress
RAMIFICATION implication, outgrowth, or consequence
RAMPANT unrestrained
RAMSHACKLE likely to collapse
RANCID spoiled, rotten
RANCOR bitter hatred
RANT to harangue, rave, forcefully scold
RAPACIOUS greedy; predatory
RAPPORT relationship of trust and respect
RAPPROCHEMENT having a cordial relationship
RAPT deeply absorbed
RAREFY to make thinner, purer, or more refined
RASH (adj) careless, hasty, reckless
RATIFY to approve formally, confirm
RATIOCINATION methodical, logical reasoning
RATION (n) portion, share
RATION (v) to supply; to restrict consumption of
RATIONAL logical, reasonable
RATIONALE line of reasoning
RAUCOUS harsh-sounding; boisterous
RAVAGE to destroy, devastate
RAVENOUS extremely hungry
RAVINE deep, narrow gorge
RAW vulgar, coarse
RAZE to tear down, demolish
REACTIONARY (adj) marked by extreme conservatism, esp. in politics
REBARBATIVE irritating; repellent
REBUFF (n) blunt rejection
REBUKE (v) to reprimand, scold
REBUT to refute by evidence or argument
RECALCITRANT resisting authority or control
RECANT to retract a statement, opinion, etc.
RECAPITULATE to review with a brief summary
RECEPTIVE open to others’ ideas; congenial
RECIDIVISM tendency to repeat previous behavior
RECIPROCATE to show or feel in return
RECLUSIVE shut off from the world
RECONDITE relating to obscure learning; known to only a few
RECOUNT (v) to describe facts or events
RECREANT disloyal; cowardly
RECRUIT (v) to draft, enlist; to seek to enroll
RECTIFY to correct
RECTITUDE moral uprightness
RECURRENCE repetition
REDRESS (n) relief from wrong or injury
REDUNDANCY unnecessary repetition
REFECTORY room where meals are served
REFLECTION image, likeness; opinion, thought, impression
REFORM (v) to change, correct
REFRACT to deflect sound or light
REFRACTORY obstinately resistant
REFUGE escape, shelter
REFURBISH to renovate
REFUTE to contradict, discredit
REGAL magnificent, splendid, fit for royalty
REGARD high esteem
REGIMEN government rule; systematic plan
REGRESS to move backward; revert to an earlier form or state
REHABILITATE to restore to good health or condition; reestablish a person’s good reputation
REITERATE to say again, repeat
REJOINDER response
REJUVENATE to make young again; renew
RELEGATE to assign to a class, especially to an inferior one
RELENT to become gentler in attitude
RELINQUISH to renounce or surrender something
RELISH (v) to enjoy greatly
REMEDIABLE capable of being corrected
REMEDY (v) to cure, correct
REMINISCENCE remembrance of past events
REMISSION lessening, relaxation
REMIT to send (usually money) as payment
REMONSTRATE to protest or object
REMOTE distant, isolated
REMUNERATION pay or reward for work, trouble, etc.
RENASCENT reborn, coming into being again
RENEGADE traitor, person abandoning a cause
RENEGE to go back on one’s word
RENITENT resisting pressure, obstinate
RENOUNCE to give up or reject a right, title, person, etc.
RENOWN fame, widespread acclaim
RENT (adj) torn apart
REPAST meal or mealtime
REPEAL to revoke or formally withdraw (often a law)
REPEL to rebuff, repulse; disgust, offend
REPENT to regret a past action
REPENTANT apologetic, guilty, remorseful
REPLETE abundantly supplied
REPLICATE to duplicate, repeat
REPOSE relaxation, leisure
REPREHEND to criticize
REPREHENSIBLE blameworthy, disreputable
REPRESS to restrain or hold in
REPRESSION act of restraining or holding in
REPRISE repetition, esp. of a piece of music
REPROACH (v) to find fault with; blame
REPROBATE morally unprincipled person
REPROVE to criticize or correct
REPUDIATE to reject as having no authority
REPULSE to repel, fend off; sicken, disgust
REQUIEM hymns or religious service for the dead
REQUITE to return or repay
RESCIND to repeal, cancel
RESIDUE remainder, leftover, remnant
RESILIENT able to recover quickly after illness or bad luck; able to bounce back into shape
RESOLUTE determined; with a clear purpose
RESOLVE (n) determination, firmness of purpose
RESOLVE (v) to conclude, determine
RESONATE to echo
RESPIRE to breathe
RESPITE interval of relief
RESPLENDENT splendid, brilliant
RESTITUTION act of compensating for loss or damage
RESTIVE impatient, uneasy, restless
RESTORATIVE having the power to renew or revitalize
RESTRAINED controlled, repressed, restricted
RESUSCITATE to revive, bring back to life
RETAIN to hold, keep possession of
RETARD (v) to slow, hold back
RETICENT not speaking freely; reserved
RETINUE group of attendants with an important person
RETIRING shy, modest, reserved
RETORT cutting response
RETRACT to draw in or take back
RETRENCH to regroup, reorganize
RETRIEVE to bring, fetch; reclaim
RETROACTIVE applying to an earlier time
RETROGRADE having a backward motion or direction
RETROSPECTIVE looking back to the past
REVELRY boisterous festivity
REVERE to worship, regard with awe
REVERT to backslide, regress
REVILE to criticize with harsh language, verbally abuse
REVITALIZE to renew; give new energy to
REVOKE to annul, cancel, call back
REVULSION strong feeling of repugnance or dislike
RHAPSODY emotional literary or musical work
RHETORIC persuasive use of language
RHYTHM regular pattern or variation of sounds and stresses
RIBALD humorous in a vulgar way
RIDDLE (v) to make many holes in; permeate
RIFE widespread, prevalent; abundant
RIFT an open space; to divide
RIGHTEOUS morally right
RIPOSTE a retort
RISQUÉ bordering on being inappropriate or indecent
ROBUST strong and healthy; hardy
ROCOCO very highly ornamented
ROIL to disturb or cause disorder
ROOT (v) to dig with a snout (like a pig)
ROOTED to have an origin or base
ROSTRUM stage for public speaking
ROTUND round in shape; fat
RUE to regret
RUFFLED irritated
RUMINATE to contemplate, reflect upon
RUSTIC rural
S
SACCHARINE excessively sweet or sentimental
SACROSANCT extremely sacred; beyond criticism
SAGACIOUS shrewd, wise
SALACIOUS lustful
SALIENT prominent or conspicuous
SALLOW sickly yellow in color
SALUBRIOUS healthful
SALUTATION greeting
SANCTION permission, support; law; penalty
SANCTUARY haven, retreat
SANGUINE ruddy; cheerfully optimistic
SAP (v) to weaken gradually
SAPIENT wise
SARDONIC cynical, scornfully mocking
SATIATE to satisfy
SAUNTER to amble; walk in a leisurely manner
SAVANT learned person
SAVORY agreeable in taste or smell
SCABBARD sheath for sword or dagger
SCABROUS dealing with indecent things; blemished
SCALE (v) to climb to the top of
SCANTINESS barely enough, meager
SCARCITY not enough, insufficient
SCATHING harshly critical; painfully hot
SCENARIO plot outline; possible situation
SCHISM a division or separation; disharmony
SCINTILLA very small amount
SCINTILLATE to sparkle, flash
SCION descendent, child
SCOFF to deride, ridicule
SCORE (n) notation for a musical composition
SCORE (v) to make a notch or scratch
SCRIVENER professional copyist
SCRUPULOUS restrained; careful and precise
SCRUTINY careful observation
SCURRILOUS vulgar, low, indecent
SECANT straight line intersecting a curve at two points
SECEDE to withdraw formally from an organization
SECLUDED isolated and remote
SECTARIAN narrow-minded; relating to a group or sect
SECULAR not specifically pertaining to religion
SEDENTARY inactive, stationary; sluggish
SEDITION behavior promoting rebellion
SEISMOLOGY science of earthquakes
SEMINAL relating to the beginning or seeds of something
SENESCENT aging, growing old
SENSUAL satisfying or gratifying the senses; suggesting sexuality
SENTENTIOUS having a moralizing tone
SENTIENT aware, conscious, able to perceive
SEPULCHRAL typical of a place of burial
SEQUEL anything that follows
SEQUESTER to remove or set apart; put into seclusion
SERAPHIC angelic, pure, sublime
SERENDIPITY habit of making fortunate discoveries by chance
SERENITY calm, peacefulness
SERPENTINE serpent-like; twisting, winding
SERRATED saw-toothed, notched
SERVILE submissive, obedient
SHARD piece of broken glass or pottery
SHEEPISH timid, meek, or bashful
SHIRK to avoid a task due to laziness or fear
SIDLE to cause to turn sideways; to move along one side
SIGNIFY denote, indicate; symbolize
SIMIAN apelike; relating to apes
SIMPER to smirk, smile foolishly
SIMPLE lacking in knowledge or intelligence
SIMULATED fake, made to look real
SINCERE genuine, true
SINECURE well-paying job or office that requires little or no work
SINGE to burn slightly, scorch
SINUOUS winding; intricate, complex
SKEPTICAL doubtful, questioning
SKULK to move in a stealthy or cautious manner; sneak
SLAKE to calm down or moderate
SLIGHT to treat as unimportant; insult
SLIPSHOD careless, hasty
SLOTH sluggishness, laziness
SLOUGH to discard or shed
SLOVENLY untidy, messy
SLUGGARD lazy, inactive person
SMELT (v) to melt metal in order to refine it
SMUTTY obscene, indecent
SNIPPET tiny part, tidbit
SOBRIETY seriousness
SOBRIQUET nickname
SODDEN thoroughly soaked; saturated
SOJOURN visit, stay
SOLACE comfort in distress; consolation
SOLARIUM room or glassed-in area exposed to the sun
SOLECISM grammatical mistake
SOLICITOUS concerned, attentive; eager
SOLIDARITY unity based on common aims or interests
SOLILOQUY literary or dramatic speech by one character, not addressed to others
SOLIPSISM belief that the self is the only reality
SOLSTICE shortest or longest day of the year
SOLUBLE capable of being solved or dissolved
SOMBER dark and gloomy; melancholy, dismal
SOMNAMBULIST sleepwalker
SOMNOLENT drowsy, sleepy; inducing sleep
SONIC relating to sound
SONOROUS producing a full, rich sound
SOPHIST person good at arguing deviously
SOPHISTRY deceptive reasoning or argumentation
SOPHOMORIC immature and overconfident
SOPORIFIC sleepy or tending to cause sleep
SORDID filthy; contemptible and corrupt
SOVEREIGN having supreme power
SPARTAN austere, severe, grave; simple, bare
SPAWN to generate, produce
SPECIOUS deceptively attractive
SPECULATION contemplation; act of taking business risks for financial gain
SPECULATIVE involving assumption; uncertain; theoretical
SPLENDID grand, illustrious
SPONTANEOUS on the spur of the moment, impulsive
SPORADIC infrequent, irregular
SPORTIVE frolicsome, playful
SPRIGHTLY lively, animated, energetic
SPUR (v) to prod
SPURIOUS lacking authenticity; counterfeit, false
SPURN to reject or refuse contemptuously; to scorn
SQUABBLE quarrel
SQUALID filthy; morally repulsive
SQUANDER to waste
STACCATO marked by abrupt, clear-cut sounds
STAGNANT immobile, stale
STAID self-restrained to the point of dullness
STALK (v) to hunt, pursue
STALWART strong, unwavering
STAND (n) group of trees
STARK bare, empty, vacant
STASIS motionless state; standstill
STATELY grand, unapproachable
STEADFAST immovable
STEADY stable, unfaltering
STENTORIAN extremely loud
STIFLE to smother or suffocate; suppress
STIGMA mark of disgrace or inferiority
STILTED stiff, unnatural
STINT (n) period of time spent doing something
STINT (v) to be sparing or frugal
STIPEND allowance; fixed amount of money paid regularly
STOCKADE enclosed area forming defensive wall
STOIC indifferent to or unaffected by emotions
STOLID having or showing little emotion
STRATAGEM trick designed to deceive an enemy
STRATIFY to arrange into layers
STRIATE striped, grooved
STRICTURE something that restrains; negative criticism
STRIDENT loud, harsh, unpleasantly noisy
STRINGENT imposing severe, rigorous standards
STRIPLING an adolescent boy
STULTIFY to impair or reduce to uselessness
STUNTED having arrested growth or development
STUPEFY to dull the senses of; stun, astonish
STYLIZE to fashion, formalize
STYMIE to block or thwart
SUAVE smoothly gracious or polite; blandly ingratiating
SUBDUED suppressed, stifled
SUBJECTION dependence, obedience, submission
SUBJUGATE to conquer, subdue; enslave
SUBLIMATE to repress impulses
SUBLIME awe-inspiring; of high spiritual or moral value
SUBLIMINAL subconscious; imperceptible
SUBMISSIVE tending to be meek and submit
SUBPOENA notice ordering someone to appear in court
SUBSEQUENT following in time or order
SUBSTANTIAL important, real
SUBTERFUGE trick or tactic used to avoid something
SUBTERRANEAN hidden, secret; underground
SUBTLE hard to detect or describe; perceptive
SUBVERT to undermine or corrupt
SUCCINCT terse, brief, concise
SUCCULENT juicy; full of vitality or freshness
SUFFERABLE bearable
SUFFRAGIST one who advocates extended voting rights
SULLEN brooding, gloomy
SULLY to soil, stain, tarnish; taint
SUMPTUOUS lavish, splendid
SUPERABUNDANCE excessive
SUPERANNUATED too old, obsolete, outdated
SUPERCILIOUS arrogant, haughty, overbearing, condescending
SUPEREROGATORY nonessential
SUPERFICIAL hasty; shallow and phony
SUPERFLUOUS extra, more than necessary
SUPERSEDE to take the place of; replace
SUPERVISE to direct or oversee the work of others
SUPPLANT to replace, substitute
SUPPLE flexible, pliant
SUPPLICANT one who asks humbly and earnestly
SUPPOSITION assumption
SURFEIT excessive amount
SURLY rude and bad-tempered
SURMISE to make an educated guess
SURMOUNT to conquer, overcome
SURPASS to do better than, be superior to
SURPLUS excess
SURREPTITIOUS characterized by secrecy
SURVEY (v) to examine in a comprehensive way
SUSCEPTIBLE vulnerable, unprotected
SUSPEND to defer, interrupt; dangle, hang
SUSTAIN support, uphold; endure, undergo
SUSTENANCE supplying the necessities of life
SWARTHY having a dark complexion
SYBARITE person devoted to pleasure and luxury
SYCOPHANT self-serving flatterer, yes-man
SYLLABUS outline of a course
SYMBIOSIS cooperation, mutual helpfulness
SYMPOSIUM meeting with short presentations on related topics
SYNCHRONOUS happening at the same time
SYNCOPATION temporary irregularity in musical rhythm
SYNOPSIS plot summary
SYNTHESIS blend, combination
SYNTHETIC artificial, imitation
T
TABLEAU vivid description, striking incident or scene
TACIT silently understood or implied
TACITURN uncommunicative, not inclined to speak much
TACTFUL skillful in dealing with others
TACTILE relating to the sense of touch
TAINT to spoil or infect; to stain honor
TAINTED stained, tarnished; corrupted, poisoned
TALISMAN something producing a magical effect
TALON claw of an animal, esp. a bird of prey
TANDEM acting as a group or in partnership
TANG sharp flavor or odor
TANGENTIAL digressing, diverting
TANGIBLE able to be sensed; perceptible, measurable
TANTAMOUNT equivalent in value or significance; amounting to
TARNISHED corroded, discolored; discredited, disgraced
TAWDRY gaudy, cheap, showy
TAXONOMY science of classification
TECHNOCRAT strong believer in technology; technical expert
TEETER to waver or move unsteadily
TEMERITY recklessness
TEMPERANCE restraint, self-control, moderation
TEMPERED moderated, restrained
TEMPESTUOUS stormy, raging, furious
TEMPORAL relating to time; chronological
TENABLE defensible, reasonable
TENACIOUS stubborn, holding firm
TENDENTIOUS biased
TENET belief, doctrine
TENSILE capable of withstanding physical stress
TENUOUS weak, insubstantial
TEPID lukewarm; showing little enthusiasm
TERMINAL (adj) concluding, final; fatal
TERMINAL (n) depot, station
TERRESTRIAL earthly; down-to-earth, commonplace
TERSE concise, brief, free of extra words
TESTAMENT statement of belief; will
TESTIMONIAL statement testifying to a truth; something given in tribute to a person’s achievement
TETHER (v) to bind, tie
THEOCRACY government by priests representing a god
THEOLOGY study of God and religion
THEORETICAL abstract
THERAPEUTIC medicinal
THESAURUS book of synonyms and antonyms
THESIS theory or hypothesis; dissertation or long written composition
THRALL a person in servitude, enslaved
THRENODY a sad poem or song
THWART to block or prevent from happening; frustrate
TIDINGS news
TIMOROUS timid, shy, full of apprehension
TINGE to color slightly
TIRADE long violent speech; verbal assault
TITAN person of colossal stature or achievement
TOADY flatterer, hanger-on, yes-man
TOLERANCE capacity to respect different values; capacity to endure or resist something
TOME book, usually large and academic
TONAL relating to pitch or sound
TOPOGRAPHY art of making maps or charts
TORPID lethargic; unable to move; dormant
TORRID burning hot; passionate
TORSION act of twisting and turning
TORTUOUS having many twists and turns; highly complex
TOTTERING barely standing
TOXIN poison
TRACTABLE obedient, yielding
TRAMMEL to impede or hamper
TRANQUIL to calm or steady
TRANSCEND to rise above, go beyond
TRANSCENDENT rising above, going beyond
TRANSCRIPTION copy, reproduction; record
TRANSFIGURATION a change; an exalting change
TRANSFORMATION a change in form or appearance
TRANSGRESS to trespass, violate a law
TRANSIENT (adj) temporary, short-lived, fleeting
TRANSITORY short-lived, existing only briefly
TRANSLATION a change from one state to another; converting one language into another
TRANSLUCENT partially transparent
TRANSMUTE to change in appearance or shape
TRANSPIRE to happen, occur; become known
TRAVESTY parody, exaggerated imitation, caricature
TREMULOUS trembling, quivering; fearful, timid
TRENCHANT acute, sharp, incisive; forceful, effective
TREPIDATION fear and anxiety
TRIBUTE a gift or statement showing respect or gratitude
TRIFLING of slight worth, trivial, insignificant
TRITE shallow, superficial
TROUNCE to beat severely, defeat
TROUPE group of actors
TRUCULENT savage and cruel; fierce; ready to fight
TRUISM something that is obviously true
TRUNCATE to cut off, shorten by cutting
TRYING difficult to deal with
TRYST agreement between lovers to meet; rendezvous
TUMULT state of confusion; agitation
TUNDRA treeless plain found in Arctic or subarctic regions
TURBID muddled; unclear
TURBULENCE commotion, disorder
TURGID swollen, bloated
TURPITUDE inherent vileness, foulness, depravity
TYRANNICAL oppressive; dictatorial
TYRO beginner, novice
U
UBIQUITOUS being everywhere simultaneously
UMBRAGE offense, resentment
UNADULTERATED absolutely pure
UNANIMITY state of total agreement or unity
UNAPPEALING unattractive, unpleasant
UNAVAILING hopeless, useless
UNBENDING inflexible, unyielding
UNBRIDLED unrestrained
UNCONSCIONABLE unscrupulous; shockingly unfair or unjust
UNCTUOUS greasy, oily; smug and falsely earnest
UNDAUNTED resolute even in adversity
UNDERMINE to sabotage, thwart
UNDOCUMENTED not certified, unsubstantiated
UNDULATING moving in waves
UNEQUIVOCAL absolute, certain
UNFAILING not likely to fail, constant, infallible
UNFETTERED free, unrestrained
UNFROCK to strip of priestly duties
UNGRACIOUS rude, disagreeable
UNHERALDED unannounced, unexpected
UNIDIMENSIONAL having one size or dimension
UNIFORM (adj) consistent and unchanging; identical
UNIMPEACHABLE beyond question
UNINITIATED not familiar with an area of study
UNKEMPT uncombed, messy in appearance
UNOBTRUSIVE modest, unassuming
UNPOLISHED lacking sophistication
UNRUFFLED poised, calm
UNSCRUPULOUS dishonest
UNSOILED clean, pure
UNSOLICITED unrequested
UNSTINTING generous
UNSULLIED clean
UNSWAYABLE unable to change
UNTOWARD not favorable; unruly
UNTRAMMELED unhampered
UNWARRANTED groundless, unjustified
UNWITTING unconscious; unintentional
UNYIELDING firm, resolute
UPBRAID to scold sharply
UPROARIOUS loud and forceful
UPSURGE sudden rise
URBANE courteous, refined, suave
USURP to seize by force
USURY practice of lending money at exorbitant rates
UTILITARIAN efficient, functional, useful
UTOPIA perfect place
V
VACILLATE to waver, show indecision
VACUOUS empty, void; lacking intelligence, purposeless
VAGRANT poor person with no home
VALIANT brave, courageous
VALIDATE to authorize, certify, confirm
VALOROUS brave, valiant
VANQUISH to conquer, defeat
VAPID tasteless, dull
VARIABLE changeable, inconstant
VARIEGATED varied; marked with different colors
VAUNTED boasted about, bragged about
VEHEMENTLY strongly, urgently
VENAL willing to do wrong for money
VENDETTA prolonged feud marked by bitter hostility
VENERABLE respected because of age
VENERATION adoration, honor, respect
VENT (v) to express, say out loud
VERACIOUS truthful, accurate
VERACITY accuracy, truth
VERBATIM word for word
VERBOSE wordy
VERDANT green with vegetation; inexperienced
VERDURE fresh, rich vegetation
VERIFIED proven true
VERISIMILITUDE quality of appearing true or real
VERITY truthfulness; belief viewed as true and enduring
VERMIN small creatures offensive to humans
VERNACULAR everyday language used by ordinary people; specialized language of a profession
VERNAL related to spring
VERSATILE adaptable, all-purpose
VERVE energy, vitality
VESTIGE trace, remnant
VETO (v) to reject formally
VEX to irritate, annoy; confuse, puzzle
VIABLE workable, able to succeed or grow
VIADUCT series of elevated arches used to cross a valley
VICARIOUS substitute, surrogate; enjoyed through imagined participation in another’s experience
VICISSITUDE change or variation; ups and downs
VIE to compete, contend
VIGILANT attentive, watchful
VIGNETTE decorative design; short literary composition
VILIFY to slander, defame
VIM energy, enthusiasm
VINDICATE to clear of blame; to support a claim
VINDICATION clearance from blame or suspicion
VINDICTIVE spiteful, vengeful, unforgiving
VIRGINAL pure, chaste
VIRILE manly, having qualities of an adult male
VIRTUE conforming to what is right
VIRTUOSO someone with masterly skill; expert musician
VIRULENT extremely poisonous; malignant; hateful
VISCOUS thick, syrupy and sticky
VITIATE reduce in value or effectiveness
VITRIOLIC burning, caustic; sharp, bitter
VITUPERATE to abuse verbally
VIVACIOUS lively, spirited
VIVID bright and intense in color; strongly perceived
VOCIFEROUS loud, vocal and noisy
VOID (adj) not legally enforceable; empty
VOID (n) emptiness, vacuum
VOID (v) to cancel, invalidate
VOLATILE explosive
VOLITION free choice, free will; act of choosing
VOLLEY (n) flight of missiles, round of gunshots
VOLUBLE speaking much and easily, talkative; glib
VOLUMINOUS large; of great quantity; writing or speaking at great length
VORACIOUS having a great appetite
VORTEX swirling, resembling a whirlpool
VULGAR obscene; common, of low class
VULNERABLE defenseless, unprotected; innocent, naive
W
WAIVE to refrain from enforcing a rule; to give up a legal right
WALLOW to indulge oneself excessively, luxuriate
WAN sickly pale
WANE to dwindle, to decrease
WANTON undisciplined, unrestrained, reckless
WARRANTY guarantee of a product’s soundness
WARY careful, cautious
WASPISH rude, behaving badly
WAVER to show indecision
WAX to increase
WAYWARD erratic, unrestrained, reckless
WEATHER (v) to endure, undergo
WEIGHTY important, momentous
WELTER (n) a confused mass; a jumble
WHET to sharpen, stimulate
WHIMSY playful or fanciful idea
WILY clever, deceptive
WINDFALL sudden, unexpected good fortune
WINSOME charming, happily engaging
WITHDRAWN unsociable, aloof; shy, timid
WIZENED withered, shriveled, wrinkled
WOE deep suffering or grief
WRAITH a ghost
WRANGLE loud quarrel
WRIT written document, usually in law
WRY amusing, ironic
X
XENOPHOBIA fear or hatred of foreigners or strangers
Y
YOKE (v) to join together
Z
ZEALOT someone passionately devoted to a cause
ZENITH highest point, summit
ZEPHYR gentle breeze
ZOOLOGIST scientist who studies animals
A Special Note for International Students
About 250,000 international students pursue advanced academic degrees at the master’s or Ph.D.level at U.S. universities each year. This trend of pursuing higher education in the United States, particularly at the graduate level, is expected to continue. Business, management, engineering, and the physical and life sciences are popular areas of study for international students. If you are an international student planning on applying to a graduate program in the United States, you will want to consider the following:
• If English is not your first language, you will probably need to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or show some other evidence that you’re proficient in English prior to gaining admission to a graduate program. Graduate programs will vary on what is an acceptable TOEFL score. For degrees in business, journalism, management, or the humanities, a minimum TOEFL score of 600 (250 on the computer-based TOEFL) or better is expected.For the hard sciences and computer technology, a TOEFL score of 550 (213 on the computer-based TOEFL) is a common minimum requirement.
• You may also need to take the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or the Graduate Management Admissions Test (GMAT) as part of the admission process.
• Since admission to many graduate programs and business schools is quite competitive, you may want to select three or four programs you would like to attend and complete applications for each program.
• Selecting the correct graduate school is very different from selecting an undergraduate school. You should research the qualifications and interests of faculty members teaching and doing research in your chosen field. Also, select a program that meets your current or future employment needs, rather than simply a program with a big name.
• Begin the application process at least a year in advance. Be aware that many programs offer only August or September start dates. Find out application deadlines and plan accordingly.
• Finally, you will need to obtain an 1-20 Certificate of Eligibility in order to obtain an F-1 Student Visa to study in the United States.
Kaplan English Programs*
If you need more help with the complex process of graduate school admissions, or assistance preparing for the TOEFL, GRE, or GMAT, you may be interested in Kaplan’s programs for international students. Kaplan English Programs were designed to help students and professionals from outside the United States meet their educational and career goals. At locations throughout the United States, international students take advantage of Kaplan’s programs to help them improve their academic and conversational English skills, raise their scores on the TOEFL, GRE, GMAT, and other standardized exams, and gain admission to top programs.
General Intensive English
Kaplan’s General Intensive English classes are designed to help you improve your skills in all areas of English and to increase your fluency in spoken and written English. Classes are available for beginning to advanced students, and the average class size is 12 students.
TOEFL and Academic English
This course provides you with the skills you need to improve your TOEFL score and succeed in an American university or graduate program. It includes advanced reading, writing, listening, grammar, and conversational English. You will also receive training for the TOEFL using Kaplan’s exclusive computer-based practice materials.
GRE for International Students
The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for admission to many graduate programs in the United States. Nearly one-half million people take the GRE each year. A high score can help you stand out from other test takers. This course, designed especially for non-native English speakers, includes the skills you need to succeed on each section of the GRE, as well as access to Kaplan’s exclusive computer-based practice materials and extra verbal practice.
GMAT for International Students
The Graduate Management Admissions Test (GMAT) is required for admission to many graduate programs in business in the United States. Hundreds of thousands of American students have taken this course to prepare for the GMAT. This course, designed especially for non-native English speakers, includes the skills you need to succeed on each section of the GMAT, as well as access to Kaplan’s exclusive computer-based practice materials and extra verbal practice.
Other Kaplan Programs
Since 1938, more than 3 million students have come to Kaplan to advance their studies, prepare for entry to American universities, and further their careers. In addition to the above programs, Kaplan offers courses to prepare for the SAT, LSAT, MCAT, DAT, USMLE, NCLEX, and other standardized exams at locations throughout the United States.
To get more information or to apply to any of Kaplan’s programs, contact us at:
Kaplan English Programs
700 S. Flower, Suite 2900
Los Angeles, CA 90017 USA
Phone (if calling from within the United States): 800-818-9128
Phone (if calling from outside the United States): (213) 452-5800
Fax: (213) 892-1364
Website: www.kaplanenglish.com
Email: [email protected]
kaptest.com/publishing
If there are any important late-breaking developments—or any changes or corrections to the Kaplan test preparation materials in this book—we will post that information online at kaptest.com/publishing. Check to see if there is any information posted there for readers of this book.
kaplansurveys.com/books
What did you think of this book? We’d love to hear your comments and suggestions. We invite you to fill out our online survey form at kaplansurveys.com/books. Your feedback is extremely helpful as we continue to develop high-quality resources to meet your needs.
Other Kaplan Books on Graduate School Admissions
Get into Graduate School
Kaplan GRE Exam: Comprehensive Program
Kaplan GRE Exam: Premier Program
Kaplan GRE Math Workbook
Kaplan GRE Exam Subject Test: Biology
Kaplan GRE Exam Subject Test: Psychology
Kaplan GRE Exam Vocabulary in a Box
Kaplan GRE Exam Vocabulary Prep
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Product Description
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A Mini-Dictionary for the Verbal Section of over 1,000 words, including special tips for the “Top 200” words most often found on the test.