All ISEE Lower Level Verbal Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #781 : Synonyms
Synonyms: Select the word whose meaning is closest to the word in capital letters.
EXTINGUISH
Insure
Water
Destroy
Protect
Illuminate
Destroy
When many people hear the word "extinguish," they think of "extinguishing a fire." This means that we use water to douse or "put out" the flame. This is a true use of the word, but it is based on a more fundamental meaning, namely, to destroy or end the existence of something. The most tempting wrong answer is likely "water," for just as we "water the plants," we might think of "watering a fire" in order to extinguish it. However, this is a rather strange use of the word "water." Also, "extinguish" really does have a broader meaning than "watering." The best option is "destroy," which best captures the sense of ending the existence of something.
Example Question #782 : Synonyms
Synonyms: Select the word whose meaning is closest to the word in capital letters.
INFLATE
Discuss
Pour
Exaggerate
Enjoy
Puff
Exaggerate
We usually use the word "inflate" to describe someone "blowing up" a balloon. The word literally means to blow into. The word "flatulence" is used to describe when someone "has gas." To "in-flate" is to put gas into something—at least in the literal sense of the word "inflate." However, it can also be used merely to express "making bigger." For instance, an "inflated ego" describes someone who thinks more highly of himself or herself than is appropriate. His or her "ego" (self-sense) is "blown up." When you inflate something, therefore, you make it larger. For this reason, the word "inflate" can mean "exaggerate."
Example Question #783 : Synonyms
Synonyms: Select the one word or phrase whose meaning is closest to the word in capital letters.
DISSOLVE
Scatter
Insult
Mix
Drink
Saturate
Scatter
We most often use the word "dissolve" to describe the process of placing a solid substance in a liquid in order to mix it into the liquid completely, making it "one" (sort of) with the liquid. This forms a solution—for instance, salt water. When you mix in the salt, all of the salt molecules break up into their ionic parts, which are able to scatter throughtout the water and be mixed throughout it. (There are other ways that solutions occur, of course. This is just an example!)
Notice the word used to describe the process: "scatter." Although we tend to use the word "dissolve" for the making of liquid solutions, it can have this more general meaning of scattering. For instance, a group of people, gathered together can then dissolve—they spread apart and are no longer one crowd. Therefore, "scatter" is the best option among those provided.
Example Question #784 : Synonyms
Synonyms: Select the one word or phrase whose meaning is closest to the word in capital letters.
EXTERMINATE
Slash
Poison
Eliminate
Attack
Assault
Eliminate
Often, we use the word "exterminate" or "exterminator" when talking about the type of person who kills insects in a house. The killing of insects is not the reason for this title, however. Instead, an "exterminator" is someone who "wipes out" or completely kills everything of a given type—insects, deer, or (sadly, as has happened in some wars) people. To "exterminate," therefore, means more than merely to "attack" or to "poison." It means to "eliminate"—that is, to destroy completely.
Example Question #785 : Synonyms
Synonyms: Select the one word or phrase whose meaning is closest to the word in capital letters.
SLACK
Untied
Looped
Loose
Chained
Roped
Loose
You might know the word "slack" from its use in the related form "slacker," meaning someone who does not do his or her work with devotion or care. A "slacker" is someone who is not hard working and therefore could be said to be "loose" in work habits. To be "slack" is to be loose—like a "slack rope" that is loose. Don't be fooled by all the "rope and chain" related words among the answers. To be slack describes being loose, not necessarily anything about ropes or chains—though ropes and chains could be "taut" (tight and/or rigid) or slack.
Example Question #786 : Synonyms
A synonym of "deploy" is __________.
wheeze
station
retreat
return
merge
station
"Deploy" is a verb that means either "move troops into position for military action" or "bring into effective action; utilize." Of the possible answer choices, "station," a word that when used as a verb means "put in or assign to a specified place for a particular purpose, especially a military one," is the answer choice closest in meaning to "deploy," so "station" is the correct answer.
Example Question #787 : Synonyms
A synonym of "cultivate" is __________.
blight
cull
apprehend
opine
plow
plow
"Cultivate" is a verb that can mean either "prepare and use land for crops or gardening" or "try to acquire or develop a quality, sentiment, or skill." While "blight" might look like a potentially correct answer because like "cultivate," it can specifically refer to plants, "blight" actually means "infect plants or a planted area with blight (a plant disease)," so it is not a synonym of "cultivate" and cannot be the correct answer. "Plow," however, is a verb that means "turn up the earth of an area of land with a plow, especially before sowing," and because it is the answer choice closest in meaning to "cultivate," "plow" is the correct answer.
Example Question #788 : Synonyms
Synonyms: Select the one word or phrase whose meaning is closest to the word in capital letters.
ENCLOSE
Confine
Prison
Inside
Bare
Confine
The word "enclose" means to close in on all sides. "Confine" is the best answer, since it shares the same definition as "enclose." Considering the other choices, "prison" is something that you can be enclosed in, "inside" means within something, and "bare" means without a covering.
Example Question #789 : Synonyms
Synonyms: Select the word that is most nearly the same in meaning as the word in capital letters.
WALKED
Strolled
Pedaled
Created
Drove
Strolled
"Walked" is a verb that means use one's feet to transport oneself somewhere at a slow, constant pace. So, the answer choice closest in meaning to "walked" is "strolled", a verb that means leisurely walked. None of the other answers are close in meaning to "walked": "drove" means operated a motor vehicle in order to get from one location to another; "pedaled" means moved by propelling oneself on a bicycle using its pedals; and "created" means made.
Example Question #790 : Synonyms
Select the answer choice that is closest in meaning to the word in capital letters.
ELUDE
Avoid
Resolve
Attract
Enclose
Imply
Avoid
If you "elude" something or someone, it means you evade or avoid it. For instance, you might elude your parents after you receive your report card if you know your grades are not stellar.
Certified Tutor
Certified Tutor
All ISEE Lower Level Verbal Resources
