SAT Critical Reading : SAT Critical Reading

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for SAT Critical Reading

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Example Questions

Example Question #211 : Adjectives And Adverbs In One Blank Sentences

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

As Isidore described the work he was doing on his dissertation, he was always met with similar responses. Blank, __________ eyes would stare back with a glassy complexion, indicating neither interest nor even comprehension.

Possible Answers:

wilting

vexed

languid

drooping

vitreous

Correct answer:

vitreous

Explanation:

The expression here is metaphorical, so the knowledge of vocabulary is key. Isidore’s “glassy” stare could also be called “vitreous,” which means like glass. It is derived from the Latin word vitrum, meaning glass.

Example Question #865 : One Blank Sentences

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

One could hardly believe how __________ it was to sell salt-water in the small town; however, the inhabitants, intrigued by the taste, would buy cases of the water at a steep markup to share with friends at dinner parties.

Possible Answers:

incredible

impracticable

risible

idiotic

lucrative

Correct answer:

lucrative

Explanation:

Since one can make quite a bit of money selling salt-water in the town, it is a rather profitable or lucrative business. This is derived ultimately from the Latin word lucrum, which means gain, profit, or even excessively greedy. The English word “lucre”, meaning money—particularly with connotations of being gained dishonorably, is from the same base.

Example Question #251 : Adjectives And Adverbs In One Blank Sentences

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

In a small, rural town, not every citizen is necessarily __________, though many are indeed quite attached to the comforts of their settled ways, questioning few of the presuppositions of their views and even less likely to believe remarks and recommendations made by “outsiders.”

Possible Answers:

provincial

inaccessible

hermetic

isolated

lonely

Correct answer:

provincial

Explanation:

To be “provincial” means to be from the provinces outside of a main city. Often, the added implication of the adjective is that such people are narrow-minded because they are unexposed to the supposed sophistications of city life.

Example Question #855 : One Blank Sentences

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

Three times, Kenneth had walked out in front of moving cars while daydreaming. Just as many times, he emerged completely hale and __________ from the dangerous encounters.

Possible Answers:

unnerved

unscathed

regretful

jangled

aloof

Correct answer:

unscathed

Explanation:

The key word is “hale,” meaning strong or healthy. The focus therefore is upon Kenneth’s physical safety in spite of his bad habits of not paying heed to the traffic; therefore, the best word would be “unscathed”, meaning without experiencing harm or injury.

Example Question #856 : One Blank Sentences

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

John’s record was utterly __________ without any mark of negative deeds or mistakes.

Possible Answers:

bland

immature

immaculate

prudish

sanctimonious

Correct answer:

immaculate

Explanation:

To be without stain is to be “immaculate.” The word comes from the Latin word “macula,” meaning stain or spot. The negative prefix “im-” indicates that the person is free from spots or stains.

Example Question #891 : Parts Of Speech In One Blank Sentences

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

Sickly from the day of his birth, Nicholas was always __________, often unable even to rise from bed for days at a time.

Possible Answers:

useless

slothful

negligent

languid

indolent

Correct answer:

languid

Explanation:

Strictly speaking, to be “languid” is to lack the inclination or desire to undertake physical exertion. It therefore often has a certain negative overtone to it (implying laziness of some sort); however, it can also mean that someone is weak from sickness, as in this case.

Related English words are “languish” and “languor.”

Example Question #861 : One Blank Sentences

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

Instead of leveling the forest into which they advanced, the settlers decided instead to incorporate the trees into their plans for the village, giving it a decidedly __________ character.

Possible Answers:

sylvan

luscious

roughhewn 

wilderness

lumbering

Correct answer:

sylvan

Explanation:

If something is “sylvan,” it is related to forests or trees. The word ultimately is derived from the Latin “silva,” meaning forest. Its related English words are rarely used in daily discourse: “silviculture” (meaning the practice of maintaining forests) and “silvology” (meaning the study of forests).

Example Question #761 : Parts Of Speech In One Blank Sentences

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

Even in large cities, one can find whole groups of people that are __________, unfamiliar with the manners of anyone outside of their particular social group.

Possible Answers:

fools

insular

dullards

sluggards

remedial

Correct answer:

insular

Explanation:

If a group is unfamiliar with the outside world, they are often isolated in their mental habits. Such a group is called “insular” because they live as though they were on an island. The word “insular” is indeed derived from the Latin word for “island,” namely, “insula.” Related English words are “insulation” and “peninsula.” 

Example Question #863 : One Blank Sentences

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

After accruing much money by his success, Sebastian decided to turn from business matters to more __________ efforts to raise the standard of living for many of those very people whom he had long overlooked in his own society.

Possible Answers:

pious

humanist

mundane

moralistic

humanitarian

Correct answer:

humanitarian

Explanation:

Do not be fooled by the option “humanist”, which really means having a philosophy or approach to learning that places the study of man, his culture, and life first. If someone is a humanist, they do not necessarily wish to aid other humans (though they might be readily inclined that way); however, someone with “humanitarian” sympathies is such a person who wishes to help in the betterment of the human condition for others.

Example Question #864 : One Blank Sentences

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

Young scholars often are __________, thinking that their brilliance is displayed in direct proportion to the number of words used in their works.

Possible Answers:

grandiloquent

arrogant

tedious

verbose

pretentious

Correct answer:

verbose

Explanation:

Although many of the options are tempting here, the key phrase is “in direct proportion to the number of words . . .” If someone is “verbose,” he or she expresses something in more words than necessary. The word is clearly related to many other “word-related” words such as “verbal,” “verb,” “verbatim,” and “proverb.”

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