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Sentence Completion Problems2009-07-02, [email protected]
1. In some cultures the essence of magic is its traditional integrity: it can be efficient only if it has been _______ without loss from primeval times to the present practitioner.(A) conventionalized(B) realized(C) transmitted(D) manipulated(E) aggrandized
2. Although skeptics say financial problems will probably _______ our establishing a base on the Moon, supporters of the project remain _______, saying that human curiosity should overcome such pragmatic constraints.(A) beset, disillusioned(B) hasten, hopeful(C) postpone, pessimistic(D) prevent, enthusiastic(E) allow, unconvinced
3. Before the Second World War, academics still questioned whether the body of literature produced in the United States truly _______ a _______ literature or whether such literature was only a provincial branch of English literature.(A) symbolized, local(B) constituted, national(C) defined, historical(D) outlined, good(E) captured, meaningful
4. Many more eighteenth-century novels were written by women than by men, but this dominance has, until very recently, been regarded merely as _______ fact, a bit of arcane knowledge noted only by bibliographers.(A) a controversial(B) a statistical(C) an analytical(D) an explicit(E) an unimpeachable
5. All _______ biological traits fall into one of two categories: those giving their possessors greater _______ the environment and those rendering them more independent of it.(A) widespread, detachment from(B) beneficial, control over(C) successful, freedom from(D) neutral, compatibility with(E) harmful, advantage in
6. One of archaeology’s central dilemmas is now to reconstruct the _______ of complex ancient societies from meager and often _______ physical evidence.(A) riddles, obsolete(B) details, irrefutable(C) intricacies, equivocal(D) patterns, flawless(E) configuration, explicit
7. Just as the authors’ book on eels is often a key text for curses in marine vertebrate zoology, their ideas on animal development and phylogeny _______
teaching in this area.(A) prevent(B) defy(C) replicate(D) inform(E) use
8. During the opera’s most famous aria the tempo chosen by the orchestra’s conductor seemed _______, without necessary relation to what had gone before.(A) capricious(B) contrite(C) demure(D) definitive(E) dauntless
9. The state of a nation’s science determines its prosperity and political power, and scientists should not _______ this relationship even if their own interest in science is of a less practical nature.(A) overlook(B) consider(C) overestimate(D) rely on(E) notice
10. In scientific studies, supporting evidence is much more satisfying to report than are discredited hypotheses, but, in fact, the _______ of errors is more likely to be _______ than is the establishment of probable truth.(A) formulation, permitted(B) correction, ignored(C) detection, useful(D) accumulation, cordial(E) deference, credulous
11. Most histories of science are success stories that conclude on _______ note with the fine _______ of a theory that is the basis of subsequent inquiries by later researchers.(A) a retrospective, extrapolation(B) an analytic, rebuttal(C) an objective, defection(D) a positive, crescendo(E) a triumphal, ascendancy
12. Whereas the Elizabethans struggled with the transition from medieval _______ experience to modern individualism, we confront an electronic technology that seems likely to reverse the trend, rendering individualism obsolete and interdependence mandatory.(A) literary(B) intuitive(C) corporate(D) heroic(E) spiritual
13. Supporters praised the mayor’ action as a speedy and judicious solution, but critics condemned it as _______ and unfairly influenced by recent events.(A) innocuous(B) deferential(C) beguiling(D) discreet
(E) premature
14. In an age without radio or recordings, and age _______ by print, fiction gained its great ascendancy.(A) decimated(B) denigrated(C) dominated(D) emphasized(E) resurrected
15. The idealized paintings of nature produced in the eighteenth century are evidence that the medieval _______ natural settings had been _______ and that the outdoors now could be enjoyed without trepidation.(A) fear of, exorcised(B) concerns about, regained(C) affection for, surmounted(D) disinterest in, alleviated(E) enthusiasm for, construed
16. Though science is often imagined as a _______ exploration of external reality, scientists are no different from anyone else: they are _______ human beings enmeshed in a web of personal and social circumstances.(A) dormant, decisive(B) neutral, rational(C) diligent, careless(D) disinterested, passionate(E) cautious, dynamic
17. While the delegate clearly sought to _______ the optimism that has emerged recently, she stopped short of suggesting that the conference was near collapse and might produce nothing of significance.(A) convene(B) confuse(C) dampen(D) elucidate(E) depict
18. Their air of cheerful self-sacrifice and endless complaisance won them undeserved praise, for their seeming gallantry was wholly motivated by a _______ wish to avoid conflict of any sort.(A) poignant(B) conductive(C) plaintive(D) corporeal(E) craven
19. Rumors, embroidered with detail, live on for years, neither denied nor confirmed, until they become accepted as fact even among people not known for their _______.(A) insight(B) obstinacy(C) introspection(D) contrition(E) credulity
20. During the 1960’s assessments of the family shifted remarkably, from general endorsement of it as a worthwhile, stable institution to wide-spread _______ it as an oppressive and bankrupt one whose _______ was both imminent and welcome.
(A) flight from, restitution(B) contortion of, corruption(C) rejection of, vogue(D) censure of, dissolution(E) corroboration, ascent
21. Furious at the harm being done to his good name, Donald sued to put an end to this _______.(A) contrition(B) depravity(C) defamation(D) derivation(E) decrepitude
22. Although scientists claim that the seemingly _______ language of their reports is more precise than the figurative language of fiction, the language of science, like all language, is inherently _______.(A) mysterious, subtle(B) morose, unintelligible(C) symbolic, complex(D) literal, allusive(E) metaphorical, lucid
23. When the graduating seniors tied balloons to their tassels, some faculty members were offended by such _______ at a supposedly serious commencement ceremony.(A) levity(B) lethargy(C) largesse(D) misgivings(E) loftiness
24. In most Native American culture, an article used in payer or ritual is made with extraordinary attention to and richness of detail: it is decorated more _______ than a similar article intended for _______ use.(A) minutely, vocational(B) colorfully, festive(C) coherently, religious(D) mordantly, commercial(E) lavishly, everyday
25. Famous among job seekers for its _______, the company, quite apart from generous salaries, bestowed on its executives annual bonuses and such _______ as low-interest home mortgages and company cars.(A) magnanimity, reparations(B) inventiveness, benefits(C) largesse, perquisites(D) discernment, prerogatives(E) malapropism, credits
26. The attempt to breed suitable varieties of jojoba by using hybridization to _______ favorable traits was finally abandoned in favor of a simple and much faster _______: the domestication of flourishing wild strains.(A) eliminate, alternative(B) reinforce, method(C) allow, creation(D) reduce, idea(E) concentrate, theory
27. Although frequent air travelers remain unconvinced, researchers have found that paradoxically, the _______ disorientation inherent in jet lag also may yield some mental health _______.(A) temporal, benefits(B) acquired, hazards(C) somatic, disorders(D) random, deficiencies(E) meager, standards
28. Because the most recent research has _______ earlier criticism of her work, one has to conclude that scientists who persist in dismissing her contribution are either _______ the latest findings or simply obstinate.(A) disparaged, satisfied with(B) mired, preoccupied with(C) marred, unmoved by(D) lauded, opposed to(E) invalidated, ignorant of
29. To list Reilly’s achievements in a fragmentary way is _______, for it distracts our attention from the _______ themes of her work.(A) unproductive, disparate(B) misleading, integrating(C) lachrymose, comprehensive(D) logical, important(E) moribund, unsettling
30. Until he learned to be more _______ about writing down his homework assignments, James seldom knew when any assignment was due.(A) morose(B) latent(C) listless(D) meddlesome(E) methodical
31. This final essay, its prevailing kindliness _______ by occasional flashes of savage irony, bespeaks the _______ character of the author.(A) illuminated, imperturbable(B) marred, dichotomous(C) mired, vindictive(D) lauded, chivalrous(E) diluted, ruthless
32. The tone of Jane Carlyle’s letter is guarded, and her feelings are always _______ by the wit and pride that made _______ plea for sympathy impossible for her.(A) masked, a direct(B) bolstered, a mawkish(C) enhanced, an intentional(D) controlled, a circumspect(E) colored, a mercurial
33. Even though in today’s Soviet Union the _______ the Muslim clergy have been accorded power and privileges, the Muslim laity and the rank-and-file clergy still have little _______ to practice their religion.(A) practitioners among, opportunity(B) magnates within, obligation(C) adversaries of, inclination(D) leaders of, latitude(E) mentors among, motive
34. He was regarded by his followers as something of _______, not only because of his insistence on strict discipline, but also because of his _______ adherence to formal details.(A) a martinet, rigid(B) a miser, sporadic(C) a rebel, minute(D) a malingerer, conscientious(E) a magnate, maniacal
35. Though his contemporaries tended to fixate on the politician’s supposed _______, his personal correspondence _______ a surprising largesse.(A) charity, confirms(B) parsimony, contradicts(C) avarice, betrays(D) integrity, reveals(E) generosity, bespeaks
36. The children’s _______ natures were in sharp contrast to the even-tempered dispositions of their parents.(A) mercurial(B) blithe(C) phlegmatic(D) loutish(E) maladroit
37. The old man could not have been accused of _______ his affection; his conduct toward the child betrayed his _______ her.(A) lavishing, fondness for(B) sparing, tolerance of(C) slackening, antipathy for(D) stinting, adoration of(E) scrutinizing, dislike of
38. James boasted that only factual arguments could influence him; he had no patience with mere _______ devices.(A) scanty(B) soporific(C) rhetorical(D) sacrilegious(E) sardonic
39. The English novelist William Thackeray considered the cult of the criminal so dangerous that he criticized Dickens’ Oliver Twist for making the characters in the thieves’ kitchen so _______.(A) sluggish(B) sporadic(C) scrupulous(D) riveting(E) repugnant
40. Jones was unable to recognize the contradictions in his attitudes that were obvious to everyone else; even the hint of an untruth was _______ to him, but he _______ serious trouble by always cheating on his taxes.(A) acceptable, risked(B) shrewd, averted(C) repugnant, courted(D) soporific, evaded
(E) ruthless, hazarded
41. Cezanne’s delicate watercolor sketches often served as _______ of a subject, a way of gathering fuller knowledge before the artist’s final engagement of the subject in an oil painting.(A) a respite(B) a synthesis(C) a reconnaissance(D) a satire(E) a reflection
42. Prudery actually draws attention to the vice it is supposed to _______; the very act that forbids speech or prohibits sight _______ what is hidden.(A) stigmatize, distorts(B) saturate, signals(C) repress, dramatizes(D) sequester, fosters(E) retaliate, conceals
43. In contrast to more _______ publications of ever narrower purview, the journal Antiquity has remained as _______ as it was when it began, continuing to serve the broader interests of the discipline of archaeology.(A) atypical, anomalous(B) specialized, eclectic(C) diverse, idiosyncratic(D) irrelevant, superfluous(E) authoritative, autocratic
44. In eighth-century Japan, people who _______ wasteland were rewarded with official ranks as part of an effort to overcome the shortage of _______ fields.(A) squandered, forested(B) reclaimed, arable(C) solicited, domestic(D) irrigated, accessible(E) required, desirable
45. As painted by Constable, the scene is not one of bucolic _______; rather it shows a striking emotional and intellectual _______.(A) subtlety, boredom(B) synthesis, detachment(C) serenity, tension(D) searing, excitement(E) nostalgia, placidity
46. The fortress like façade of the Museum of Cartoon Art seems calculated to remind visitors the comic strip is an art form that has often been _______ by critics.(A) charmed(B) assailed(C) revoked(D) exhilarated(E) overwhelmed
47. Rhetoric often seems to _______ over reason in a heated debate, with both sides _______ in hyperbole.(A) cloud, subsiding(B) prevail, yielding(C) triumph, engaging(D) requite, clamoring
(E) tout, sneering
48. The meeting seemed _______, not just because decisions were made with excessive deliberation, but also because the director was so _______ as to provoke extremely lengthy debate.(A) abbreviated, distracted(B) interminable, tendentious(C) sedentary, persuasive(D) endless, amenable(E) restive, withdrawn
49. The reception given to Kimura’s radical theory of molecular evolution shows that when _______ fights orthodoxy to a draw, then novelty has seized a good chunk of space from convention.(A) imitation(B) reaction(C) dogmatism(D) invention(E) mediocrity
50. Some customs travel well; often, however, behavior that is considered the epitome of _______ at home is perceived as impossibly rude or, at the least, harmlessly bizarre abroad.(A) sordidness(B) servility(C) urbanity(D) coarseness(E) satiricalness
51. Paradoxically, altruism may in fact be _______ if it aids only one’s close relatives.(A) stalwart(B) beneficent(C) rancorous(D) selfish(E) censorious
52. The pressure of population available resources is the key to understanding history; consequently, any historical writing that takes no cognizance of _______ facts is _______ flawed.(A) demographic, intrinsically(B) ecological, marginally(C) cultural, substantively(D) psychological, philosophically(E) political, demonstratively
53. Fenster schemed and plotted for weeks and these _______ were rewarded when Griswold was fired and Fenster was promoted.(A) circumlocutions(B) affiliations(C) gibbering(D) machinations(E) renunciations
54. Thomas Jefferson’s decision not to _______ lotteries was sanctioned by classical wisdom, which held that, far from being a _______ game, lots were a way of divining the future and of involving the gods in everyday affairs.(A) expand, sacred(B) publicize, vile
(C) condemn, debased(D) legalize, standardized(E) restrict, useful
55. Although she was normally a _______ individual, she attacked the heckler who had been interrupting her speech.(A) perceptive(B) pusillanimous(C) peaceful(D) choleric(E) boastful
56. Although the feeding activities of whales and walruses give the seafloor of the Bering Shelf a devastated appearance, these activities seem to be actually _______ to the area, _______ its productivity.(A) destructive, counterbalancing(B) rehabilitative, diminishing(C) beneficial, enhancing(D) detrimental, redirecting(E) superfluous, encumbering
57. The somber news from the flood-stricken area does not justify the _______ attitude which you are displaying.(A) lugubrious(B) sanguinary(C) belligerent(D) optimistic(E) gloomy
58. Noting that few employees showed any _______ for complying with the corporation’s new safety regulations, Peterson was forced to conclude that acceptance of the regulations would be _______, at best.(A) aptitude, unavoidable(B) regard, indeterminate(C) respect, negotiable(D) patience, imminent(E) enthusiasm, grudging
59. The observation that nurses treating patients with pellagra did not _______ the disease led epidemiologists to question the theory that pellagra is _______.(A) risk, deadly(B) fear, curable(C) acknowledge, common(D) contract, contagious(E) battle, preventable
60. Sometimes fiction is marred by departures from the main narrative, but Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye is instead _______ by its _______, which add levels of meaning of the principal story.(A) enhanced, digressions(B) harmed, excursions(C) adorned, melodramas(D) strengthened, criticisms(E) unaffected, circumlocutions
61. Here in America, we have a _______ speech that is neither American, Oxford English, nor English but a _______ of all three.(A) motley, conflagration
(B) hybrid, combination(C) nasal, mutilation(D) mangled, conglomeration(E) feigned, masquerade
62. We were annoyed by her _______ reply for we had been led to expect definite assurances of her approval.(A) acerbic(B) noncommittal(C) vehement(D) caustic(E) articulate
63. Linguists have now confirmed what experienced users of ASL-American Sign Language- have always implicitly known: ASL is a grammatically _______ language in that it is capable of expressing every possible syntactic relation.(A) limited(B) economical(C) complete(D) shifting(E) abstract
64. Aalto, like other modernists, believed that form follows functions; consequently, his furniture designs asserted that _______ of human needs, and the furniture’s form was _______ human use.(A) universality, refined by(B) importance, relegated to(C) rationale, emphasized by(D) primacy, determined by(E) variability, reflected in
65. The action and characters in a melodrama can be so immediately _______ that all observers can hiss the villain with an air of smug but enjoyable _______.(A) spurned, boredom(B) forgotten, condescension(C) classified, self-righteousness(D) plausible, guilt(E) gripping, skepticism
66. The wonder of De Quincey is that although opium dominated his life, it never _______ him; indeed, he turned its use to _______ when he published the story of its influence in the London Magazine.(A) overcame, altruism(B) intimidated, triumph(C) distressed, pleasure(D) conquered, gain(E) released, necessity
67. Scientists who are on the cutting edge of research must often violate common sense and make seemingly _______ assumptions because existing theories simply do not _______ newly observed phenomena.(A) radical, confirm(B) vague, incorporate(C) absurd, explain(D) mistaken, reveal(E) inexact, corroborate
68. Today water is more _______ in landscape architecture than ever before, because
technological advances have made it easy, in some instances even _______ to install water features in public places.(A) conspicuous, prohibitive(B) sporadic, effortless(C) indispensible, intricate(D) ubiquitous, obligatory(E) controversial, unnecessary
69. The muses are _______ deities: they avenge themselves without mercy on those who weary of their charms.(A) rueful(B) ingenuous(C) solicitous(D) vindictive(E) dispassionate
70. A study of Berthe Morisot’s painting technique reveals that her apparent _______ and _______ execution were never as casual as they seemed but actually resulted from years of practice and concentration.(A) craft, studied(B) improvisation, diligent(C) spontaneity, rapid(D) deception, flawless(E) accomplishment, laborious
71. A misconception frequently held by novice writers is that sentence structure mirrors thought: the more convoluted the structure, the more _______ the ideas.(A) complicated(B) inconsequential(C) elementary(D) fanciful(E) blatant
72. Babcock’s criticism of the business practices of fellow merchants was colored by _______; the more successful the other entrepreneurs, the more bitterly they were _______.(A) sensitivity, courted(B) jealousy, castigated(C) admiration, admonished(D) ambivalence, dismissed(E) blame, exonerated
73. Few of us take the pains to study our cherished convictions; indeed, we almost have a natural _______ doing so.(A) aptitude for(B) repugnance to(C) interest in(D) ignorance of(E) reaction after
74. Just as astrology was for centuries _______ faith, countering the strength of established churches, so today believing in astrology is an act of _______ the professional sciences.(A) an individual, rebellion by(B) an accepted, antagonism toward(C) an underground, defiance against(D) a heretical, support for(E) an unknown, concern about
75. If you come to the conference with such _______ attitude, we cannot expect to reach _______ agreement.(A) a subservient, passive(B) an indolent, satisfactory(C) an unwonted, hypothetical(D) an obdurate, harmonious(E) a complicated, conclusive
76. The credibility of her _______ description of the conflicts experienced by many contemporary women in their everyday lives was undermined by her _______ conclusions.(A) even-handed, partisan(B) biased, lopsided(C) detailed, careful(D) general, far-reaching(E) realistic, valid
77. Although Johnson _______ great enthusiasm for his employees’ project, in reality his interest in the project was so _______ as to be almost nonexistent.(A) generated, redundant(B) displayed, preemptive(C) expected, indiscriminate(D) feigned, perfunctory(E) demanded, dispassionate
78. Dependence on foreign sources of heavy metals, though _______, remains _______ for United States foreign policy.(A) deepening, a challenge(B) diminishing, a problem(C) excessive, a dilemma(D) debilitating, an embarrassment(E) unavoidable, a precedent
79. In many science fiction films, the opposition of good and evil is portrayed as a _______ between technology, which is _______, and the errant will of a depraved intellectual.(A) fusion, useful(B) struggle, dehumanizing(C) parallel, unfettered(D) conflict, beneficent(E) similarity, malevolent
80. Although some of her fellow scientists _______ the unorthodox laboratory methodology than others found innovative, unanimous praise greeted her experimental results: at once pioneering and _______.(A) ignored, untrustworthy(B) complimented, foreseeable(C) welcomed, mundane(D) decried, unexceptionable(E) attacked, inconclusive
81. Business forecasts usually prove reasonably accurate when the assumption that the future will be much like the past is _______; in times of major _______ in the business environment, however, forecasts can be dangerously wrong.(A) specified, discontinuities(B) questioned, surges(C) renounced, improvements
(D) stipulated, risks(E) satisfied, shifts
82. In their preface, the collection’s editors plead that certain of the important articles they _______ were published too recently for inclusion, but in the case of many such articles, this _______ is not valid.(A) discussed, replacement(B) omitted, excuse(C) revised, clarification(D) disparaged, justification(E) ignored, endorsement
83. The labor union and the company’s management despite their long history of unfailingly acerbic disagreement on nearly every issue, have nevertheless reached an unexpectedly _______, albeit still tentative, agreement on next year’s contract.(A) swift(B) onerous(C) hesitant(D) reluctant(E) conclusive
84. The _______ questions that consistently structure the study of history must be distinguished from merely _______ questions, which have their day and then pass into oblivion.(A) recurrent, practical(B) instinctive, factual(C) ingrained, discriminating(D) philosophical, random(E) perennial, ephemeral
85. That she seemed to prefer _______ to concentrated effort is undeniable; nevertheless, the impressive quality of her finished paintings suggests that her actual relationship to her art was anything but _______.(A) preparation, passionate(B) artfulness, disengaged(C) dabbling, superficial(D) caprice, considered(E) indecision, lighthearted
86. Although they were not direct _______, the new arts of the Classical period were clearly created in the spirit of older Roman models and thus _______ many features of the older style.(A) impressions, introduced(B) translations, accentuated(C) copies, maintained(D) masterpieces, depicted(E) borrowings, improvised
87. Marshal Philippe Petain, unlike any other French citizen of this century, has been, paradoxically, the object of both great veneration and great _______.(A) reverence(B) interest(C) empathy(D) contempt(E) praise
88. Philosophical problems arise when people ask questions that, though very
_______, have certain characteristics in common.(A) relevant(B) elementary(C) abstract(D) diverse(E) controversial
89. Early critics of Emily Dickinson’s poetry mistook for simplemindedness the surface of artlessness that in fact she constructed with such _______.(A) astonishment(B) vexation(C) allusion(D) innocence(E) cunning
90. Her tone of voice _______ him: he could not tell whether she was being _______ or whether he was to take her comment literally.(A) offended, genuine(B) puzzled, direct(C) comforted, kind(D) reassured, condescending(E) perplexed, sarcastic
91. The self-important cant of musicologists on record jackets often suggests that true appreciation of the music is an _______ process closed to the uninitiated listener, however enthusiastic.(A) unreliable(B) variegated(C) salubrious(D) arcane(E) balmy
92. By divesting himself of all regalities, the former king _______ the consideration that customarily protects monarchs.(A) merited(B) forfeited(C) debased(D) concealed(E) superannuated
93. I have no _______ in this matter: I am forced to follow the guidelines set forth in this manual.(A) grudge(B) qualifications(C) prudence(D) wisdom(E) latitude
94. The _______ qualities of this salve will provide you with temporary relief from the pain which you now suffer.(A) obscure(B) analgesic(C) soporific(D) caustic(E) esthetic
95. Just as midwifery was for hundreds of years _______ practice, something that women retained control over for themselves, so too the increasingly independent
role of the midwife in the process of childbirth is _______ domination by institutional medicine.(A) a personal, reaction of(B) a controversial, tolerance of(C) an autonomous, liberation from(D) a communal, celebration of(E) a dangerous, protection from
96. Usually the first to spot data that were inconsistent with other findings, in this particular experiment she let a number of _______ results slip by.(A) inaccurate(B) verifiable(C) redundant(D) salient(E) anomalous
97. In a most impressive demonstration, Pavarotti sailed through Verdi’s “Celeste Aida,” normally a tenor’s _______, with the casual enthusiasm of a folk singer performing one of his favorite _______.(A) pitfall, recitals(B) glory, chorales(C) nightmare, ballads(D) delight, chanteys(E) routine, composers
98. Unfortunately, his damaging attacks on the ramification of the economic policy have been _______ by his wholehearted acceptance of that policy’s underlying assumptions.(A) supplemented(B) undermined(C) wasted(D) diverted(E) redeemed
99. In the seventeenth century, direct flouting of a generally accepted system of values was regarded as _______, even as a sign of madness.(A) adventurous(B) frivolous(C) willful(D) impermissible(E) irrational
100. In keeping with the well-established custom that even the most favorable review should include some _______, the reviewer follows her _______ the book’s prose with some objections to its implementations of theory.(A) equivocations, quibbles with(B) accolades, attack on(C) reservations, praise of(D) disparagements, criticism of(E) compliments, consideration of
101. Mary hoped to get the job not only because of the salary but also because of the health plan and other _______ which went with it.(A) perquisites(B) inconveniences(C) detractions(D) details(E) prerequisites
102. Propaganda may influence the sophisticated and urbane as well as the more _______ members of the community.(A) knowledgeable(B) worldly(C) gullible(D) philanthropic(E) blasé
103. Congress is having great difficulty developing a consensus on energy policy, primarily because the policy objectives of various members of Congress rest on such _______ assumptions.(A) commonplace(B) trivial(C) explicit(D) divergent(E) fundamental
104. In the design of medical experiments, the need for _______ assignment of treatments to patients must be _______ the difficulty of persuading patients to participate in an experiment in which their treatment is decided by chance.(A) independent, amended by(B) competent, emphasized by(C) mechanical, controlled by(D) swift, associated with(E) random, reconciled with
105. People should not be praised for their virtue if they lack the energy to be _______; in such cases, goodness is merely the effect of _______.(A) depraved, hesitation(B) cruel, effortlessness(C) wicked, indolence(D) unjust, boredom(E) iniquitous, impiety
106. Despite vigorous protestations, the grin on the teenager’s face _______ her denial that she had known about the practical joke before it was played on her parents.(A) belied(B) illustrated(C) reinforced(D) exacerbated(E) trivialized
107. Nature’s energy efficiency often _______ human technology: despite the intensity of the light fireflies produce, the amount of heat is negligible; only recently have humans developed chemical light-producing systems whose efficiency _______ the firefly’s systems.(A) engenders, manipulates(B) reflects, simulates(C) outstrips, rivals(D) inhibits, matches(E) determines, reproduces
108. While nurturing parents can compensate for adversity, cold or inconsistent parents may _______ it.(A) exacerbate(B) neutralize
(C) eradicate(D) ameliorate(E) relieve
109. Dramatic literature often _______ the history of a culture in that it takes as its subject matter the important events that have shaped and guided the culture.(A) confounds(B) repudiates(C) recapitulates(D) anticipates(E) polarizes
110. Documenting science’s _______ philosophy would be _______, since it is almost axiomatic that many philosophers use scientific concepts as the foundations for their speculations.(A) distrust of, elementary(B) influence on, superfluous(C) reliance on, inappropriate(D) dependence on, difficult(E) differences from, impossible
111. The results of the experiments performed by Elizabeth Hazed and Rachel Brown were _______ not only because these results challenged old assumptions but also because they called the _______ methodology into question.(A) provocative, prevailing(B) predictable, contemporary(C) inconclusive, traditional(D) intriguing, projected(E) specious, original
112. Because they had expected the spacecraft Voyager 2 to be able to gather data only about the planets Jupiter and Saturn, scientists were _______ the wealth of information it sent back from Neptune twelve years after leaving Earth.(A) disappointed in(B) concerned about(C) confident in(D) elated by(E) anxious for
113. Scientists’ pristine reputation as devotees of the disinterested pursuit of truth has been _______ by recent evidence that some scientists have deliberately _______ experimental results to further their own careers.(A) reinforced, published(B) validated, suppressed(C) exterminated, replicated(D) compromised, fabricated(E) resuscitated, challenged
114. It is his dubious distinction to have proved what nobody would think of denying, that Romero at the age of sixty-four writes with all the characteristics of _______.(A) maturity(B) fiction(C) inventiveness(D) art(E) brilliance
115. It is a great _______ to be able to transfer useful genes with as little extra
material as possible, because the donor’s genome may contain, in addition to desirable genes, many genes with _______ effects.(A) misfortune, unpredictable(B) disappointment, superfluous(C) convenience, exquisite(D) accomplishment, profound(E) advantage, deleterious
116. Scholars’ sense of the uniqueness of the central concept of “the state” at the time when political science became an academic field quite naturally led to striving for a correspondingly _______ mode of study.(A) through(B) distinctive(C) dependable(D) scientific(E) dynamic
117. In certain forms of discourse such as the parable, the central point of a message can be effectively communicated even though this point is not _______.(A) preferred(B) explicit(C) inferable(D) discerned(E) illustrated
118. Wearing the latest fashions was exclusively the _______ of the wealthy until the 1850’s, when mass production, aggressive entrepreneurs, and the availability of the sewing machine made them _______ the middle class.(A) aspiration, disagreeable to(B) vexation, superfluous for(C) bane, profitable to(D) prerogative, accessible to(E) obligation, popular with
119. A number of writers who once greatly _______ the literary critic have recently recanted, substituting _______ for their former criticism.(A) lauded, censure(B) influenced, analysis(C) simulated, ambivalence(D) disparaged, approbation(E) honored, adulation
120. Broadway audiences have become inured to _______ and so _______ to be pleased as to make their ready ovations meaningless as an indicator of the quality of the production before them.(A) sentimentality, reluctant(B) condescension, disinclined(C) histrionics, unlikely(D) cleverness, eager(E) mediocrity, desperate
121. Any population increase beyond a certain level necessitates greater _______ vegetable foods; thus, the ability of a society to choose meat over cereals always arises, in part, from _______ the number of people.(A) reliance on, replenishing(B) production of, estimating(C) spending on, concealing(D) recourse to, limiting
(E) attention to, varying
122. A recent survey shows that, while ninety-four percent of companies conducting management-training programs open them to women, women are _______ only seventy-four percent of those programs.(A) protesting against(B) participating in(C) displeased by(D) allowed in(E) refused by
123. Thomas Paine, whose political writing was often flamboyant, was in private life a surprisingly _______ man: he lived in rented rooms, ate little, and wore drab clothes.(A) simple(B) controversial(C) sordid(D) comfortable(E) discourteous
124. Because she had a reputation for _______, we were surprised and pleased when she greeted us so _______.(A) insolence, irately(B) insouciance, cordially(C) graciousness, amiably(D) arrogance, disdainfully(E) querulousness, affably
125. The struggle of the generations is one of the obvious constants of human affairs; therefore, it may be presumptuous to suggest that the rivalry between young and old in Western society during the current decade is _______ critical.(A) perennially(B) disturbingly(C) uniquely(D) archetypally(E) captiously
126. At first, I found her gravity rather intimidating; but, as I saw more of her, I found that _______ was very near the surface.(A) seriousness(B) confidence(C) laughter(D) poise(E) determination
127. Despite claims that his philosophy can be traced to _______ source, the philosophy in fact draws liberally on several traditions and methodologies and so could justifiably be termed _______.(A) a particular, consistent(B) a schematic, multifaceted(C) a dominant, cogent(D) an authoritative, derivative(E) a single, eclectic
128. During a period of protracted illness, the sick can become infirm, _______ both the strength to work and many of the specific skills they once possessed.(A) regaining(B) denying
(C) pursuing(D) insuring(E) losing
129. Melodramas, which presented stark oppositions between innocence and criminality, virtue and corruption, good and evil, were popular precisely because they offered the audience a world _______ of _______.(A) bereft, theatricality(B) composed, adversity(C) full, circumstantiality(D) deprived, polarity(E) devoid, neutrality
130. Du Bois’s foreign trips were the highlight, not the _______, of his travels; he was habitually on the go across and around the United States.(A) idiosyncrasy(B) result(C) precursor(D) culmination(E) totality
131. In parts of the Arctic, the land grades into the landfast ice so _______ that you can walk off the coast and not know you are over the hidden sea.(A) permanently(B) imperceptibly(C) irreqularly(D) precariously(E) slightly
132. Parts of seventeenth-century Chinese pleasure gardens were not necessarily intended to look _______; they were designed expressly to evoke the agreeable melancholy resulting from a sense of the _______ of natural beauty and human glory.(A) beautiful, immutability(B) cheerful, transitoriness(C) colorful, abstractness(D) luxuriant, simplicity(E) conventional, wildness
133. Despite many decades of research on the gasification of coal, the data accumulated are not directly _______ to environmental questions; thus a new program of research specifically addressing such question is _______.(A) analogous, promising(B) transferable, contradictory(C) antithetical, unremarkable(D) applicable, warranted(E) pertinent, unnecessary
134. Unlike other creatures, who are shaped largely by their _______ environment, human beings are products of a culture accumulated over centuries, yet one that is constantly being _______ by massive infusions of new information from everywhere.(A) harsh, unconfirmed(B) surrounding, upheld(C) immediate, transformed(D) natural, mechanized(E) limited, superseded
135. Vaillant, who has been particularly interested in the means by which people attain mental health, seems to be looking for _______ answers: a way to close the book on at least a few questions about human nature.(A) definitive(B) confused(C) temporary(D) personal(E) derivative
136. Because many of the minerals found on the ocean floor are still _______ on land, where mining the ocean floor has yet to become a _______ enterprise.(A) scarce, marginal(B) accessible, marginal(C) unidentified, subsidized(D) conserved, public(E) plentiful, profitable
137. The disjunction between educational objectives that stress independence and individuality and those that emphasize obedience to rules and cooperation with others reflects a _______ that arises from the values on which these objectives are based.(A) conflict(B) redundancy(C) gain(D) predictability(E) wisdom
138. The Chinese, who began systematic astronomical and weather observations shortly after the ancient Egyptians, were assiduous record-keepers, and because of this, can claim humanity’s longest continuous _______ of natural events.(A) defiance(B) documentation(C) maintenance(D) theory(E) domination
139. The valedictory address, as it has developed in American colleges and universities over the years, has become a very strict form, a literary _______ that permits very little _______.(A) text, clarity(B) work, tradition(C) genre, deviation(D) oration, grandiloquence(E) achievement, rigidity
140. It is _______ for a government to fail to do whatever it can to eliminate a totally _______ disease.(A) folly, innocuous(B) irresponsible, preventable(C) crucial, fatal(D) instinctive, devastating(E) detrimental, insignificant
141. Inspired interim responses to hitherto unknown problem, New Deal economic stratagems became _______ as a result of bureaucratization, their flexibility and adaptability destroyed by their transformation into rigid policies.(A) politicized
(B) consolidated(C) ossified(D) ungovernable(E) streamlined
142. Natural selection tends to eliminate genes that cause inherited diseases, acting most strongly against the most severe diseases; consequently, hereditary disease that are _______ would be expected to be very _______, but, surprisingly, they are not.(A) lethal, rare(B) untreated, dangerous(C) unusual, refractory(D) new, perplexing(E) widespread, acute
143. That his intransigence in making decisions _______ no open disagreement from any quarter was well known; thus, clever subordinates learned the art of _______ their opinions in casual remarks.(A) elicited, quashing(B) engendered, recasting(C) brooked, intimating(D) embodied, instigating(E) forbore, emending
144. Some paleontologists debate whether the diversity of species has _______ since the Cambrian period or whether imperfections in the fossil record only suggest greater diversity today, while in actuality there has been either _______ or decreased diversity.(A) changed, escalation(B) increased, stasis(C) expanded, discontinuity(D) declined, reduction(E) improved, deviation
145. It is strange how words shape out thoughts and trap us at the bottom of deeply _______ canyons of thinking, their imprisoning sides carved out by the _______ of past usage.(A) cleaved, eruptions(B) rooted, flood(C) incised, river(D) ridged, ocean(E) notched, mountains
146. The sheer diversity of tropical plants represents a seemingly _______ source of raw materials, of which only a few have been utilized.(A) exploited(B) quantifiable(C) controversial(D) inexhaustible(E) remarkable
147. For centuries animals have been used as _______ for people in experiments to assess the effects of therapeutic and other agents that might later be used in humans.(A) benefactors(B) companions(C) examples(D) precedents
(E) surrogates
148. By idiosyncratically refusing to dismiss an insubordinate member of his staff, the manager not only _______ established policy, but he also _______ his heretofore good chances for promotion.(A) instituted, bettered(B) recognized, protected(C) contravened, jeopardized(D) reiterated, computed(E) delimited, restricted
149. The widespread public shock at the news of the guilty verdict was caused partly by _______ news stories that had _______ acquittal.(A) sensational, condemned(B) buried, urged(C) impartial, mentioned(D) biased, predicted(E) local, denounced
150. Only by ignoring decades of mismanagement and inefficiency could investors conclude that a fresh infusion of cash would provide anything more than a _______ solution to the company’s financial woes.(A) fair(B) temporary(C) genuine(D) realistic(E) complete
151. Although the discovery of antibiotics led to great advances in clinical practice, it did not represent a _______ bacterial illness, for there are some bacteria that cannot be _______ treated with antibiotics.(A) breakthrough in, consistently(B) panacea for, effectively(C) neglect of, efficiently(D) reexamination of, conventionally(E) resurgence of, entirely
152. To compensate for the substantial decline in the availability of fossil fuels in future years, we will have to provide at least _______ alternative energy source.(A) an anticipated(B) an official(C) an equivalent(D) a derivative(E) a redundant
153. There is some _______ the fact that the author of a book as sensitive and informed as Indian Artisans did not develop her interest in Native American art until adulthood, for she grew up in a region rich in American Indian culture.(A) irony in(B) satisfaction in(C) doubt about(D) concern about(E) presumptuousness in
154. Ironically, the party leaders encountered no greater _______ their efforts to build a progressive party than the _______ of the progressives already elected to the legislature.(A) support for, advocacy
(B) threat to, promise(C) benefit from, success(D) obstacle to, resistance(E) praise for, reputation
155. Though many medieval women possessed devotional books that had belonged to their mothers, formal written evidence of women bequeathing books to their daughters is scarce, which suggests that such bequests were _______and required no _______.(A) unselfish, rationalization(B) tangential, approval(C) customary, documentation(D) covert, discretion(E) spurious, record
156. The challenge of interpreting fictional works written under politically repressive regimes lies in distinguishing what is _______ to an author’s beliefs, as opposed to what is _______ by political coercion.(A) innate, understood(B) organic, imposed(C) contradictory, conveyed(D) oblique, captured(E) peripheral, demanded
157. Observable as a tendency of our culture is a _______ of _______ psychoanalysis: we no longer feel that it can solve our emotional problems.(A) divergence, certainty about(B) confrontation, enigmas in(C) withdrawal, belief in(D) defense, weaknesses in(E) failure, rigor in
158. The astronomer and feminist Maria Mitchell’s own prodigious activity and the vigor of the Association for the Advancement of Women during the 1870’s _______ any assertion that feminism was _______ in that period.(A) exclude, thriving(B) contradict, prospering(C) pervade, remote(D) buttress, dormant(E) belie, quiescent
159. Nineteenth-century scholars, by examining earlier geometric Greek art, found that classical Greek art was not a magical _______ or a brilliant _______ blending Egyptian and Assyrian art, but was independently evolved by Greeks in Greece.(A) stratagem, appropriation(B) exemplar, synthesis(C) conversion, annexation(D) paradigm, construct(E) apparition, amalgam
160. The repudiation of Puritanism in seventeenth-century England expressed itself not only in retaliatory laws to _______ Puritans, but also in a general attitude of _______ for Puritans.(A) restrict, contempt(B) regulate, regard(C) benefit, affection(D) repress, respect
(E) evade, hatred
161. In the absence of any _______ caused by danger, hardship, or even cultural difference, most utopian communities deteriorate into _______ but enervating backwaters.(A) turmoil, frantic(B) mistrust, naïve(C) amelioration, ignorant(D) decimation, intrusive(E) stimulation, placid
162. Some artists immodestly idealize or exaggerate the significance of their work; yet others _______ to exalt the role of the artist, reject a transcendent view of art.(A) appearing(B) disdaining(C) seeking(D) failing(E) tending
163. Calculus, though still indispensable to science and technology, is no longer _______; it has an equal partner called discrete mathematics.(A) preeminent(B) pertinent(C) beneficial(D) essential(E) pragmatic
164. Despite its _______, the book deals _______ with a number of crucial issues.(A) optimism, cursorily(B) importance, needlessly(C) virtues, inadequately(D) novelty, strangely(E) completeness, thoroughly
165. If the theory is self-evidently true, as its proponents assert, then why does _______ it still exist among well-informed people?(A) support for(B) excitement about(C) regret for(D) resignation about(E) opposition to
166. Religious philosopher that he was, Henry More derived his conception of an infinite universe from the Infinite God in whom he believed, a benevolent God of _______ whose nature was to create _______.(A) plenitude, abundance(B) vengeance, justice(C) indifference, suffering(D) indulgence, temperance(E) rectitude, havoc
167. A century ago the physician’s word was _______: to doubt it was considered almost sacrilegious.(A) inevitable(B) intractable(C) incontrovertible
(D) objective(E) respectable
168. So much of modern fiction in the United States is autobiographical, and so much of the autobiography fictionalized, that the _______ sometimes seem largely _______.(A) authors, ignored(B) needs, unrecognized(C) genres, interchangeable(D) intentions, misunderstood(E) misapprehensions, uncorrected
169. Prior to the work of Heckel, illustrations of fish were often beautiful but rarely _______; this fish, combined with the _______ nature of most nineteenth-century taxonomic descriptions, often kept scientists from recognizing differences between species.(A) impressive, inaccurate(B) realistic, detailed(C) traditional, progressive(D) precise, inexact(E) distinctive, sophisticated
170. According to some experts, modern science as it emerged in the seventeenth century was essentially a _______ calling: the culture of science was more a _______ than a departure from ecclesiastical traditions.(A) scholarly, recapitulation of(B) skeptical, return to(C) religious, continuation of(D) solemn, recantation of(E) technical, modification of
171. We first became aware that his support for the new program was less than _______ when he declined to make a speech in its favor.(A) qualified(B) haphazard(C) fleeting(D) unwarranted(E) wholehearted
172. Because of the excellent preservation of the fossil, anatomical details of early horseshoe crabs were _______ for the first time, enabling experts to _______ the evolution of the horseshoe crab.(A) scrutinized, ensure(B) verified, advance(C) identified, dirt(D) obscured, illustrate(E) clarified, reassess
173. Nothing _______ his irresponsibility better than his _______ delay in sending us the items he promised weeks ago.(A) justifies, conspicuous(B) characterizes, timely(C) epitomizes, unnecessary(D) reveals, conscientious(E) conceals, inexplicable
174. The few dozen gray seals that have thus far died of canine distemper can, at least for now, be considered _______, since most of the remaining 200,000
gray seals appear uninfected by the disease.(A) unexceptional(B) immune(C) anomalous(D) endangered(E) contagious
175. Because modern scientists find the ancient Greek view of the cosmos outdated and irrelevant, they now perceive it as only of _______ interest.(A) historical(B) intrinsic(C) astronomical(D) experimental(E) superfluous
176. Although the intellectual and artistic achievements of this ancient civilization were, even by modern standards, extraordinarily _______, its level of technical and mechanical development was by no means _______to that of modern technology.(A) primitive, superior(B) diverse, inimical(C) sophisticated, comparable(D) primeval, equivalent(E) influential, subordinate
177. Although the genetic explanation of why some people are right-handed whereas others are left-handed is plausible, it has been effectively _______ by experiments in which genetically _______ mice showed different paw preferences.(A) verified, related(B) challenged, indistinguishable(C) tested, altered(D) proven, identical(E) destroyed, complex
178. While T.S. Eliot maintained that poets themselves were the best _______ of _______, C.S. Lewis opposed this view, declaring that one did not have to be a trained chef to be a discriminating gourmet.(A) mimics, life(B) constructors, rhyme(C) critics, verse(D) conservators, aesthetics(E) interpreters, sensation
179. The discipline of sociology has finally achieved a degree of consensus: however _______ their individual interpretations and emphases might be, most sociologists now _______ a single broad conception of the field.(A) different, share(B) uncontroversial, champion(C) limited, reject(D) divergent, dispute(E) concordant, acknowledge
180. By forcing our surrender to the authority of the clock, systematic timekeeping has imposed a form of _______ on society.(A) anarchy(B) permanence(C) provincialism(D) tyranny
(E) autonomy
181. Overall, the evidence was inconclusive as to whether the adjustment to the inflated estimates would _______ their accuracy or instead _______ the actual amount.(A) compromise, magnify(B) confirm, validate(C) disprove, pinpoint(D) verify, distort(E) improve, understate
182. Perhaps there is a shortcoming in the script, but the film’s poor reviews may also be a function of one or two _______ casting decisions in an otherwise _______ production.(A) fitting, magnificent(B) faulty, solid(C) deliberate, cautious(D) hasty, mediocre(E) confusing, perplexing
183. As a means of _______ a tempestuous confrontation, the labor arbitrator advised the opposing parties to _______ their positions.(A) promoting, qualify(B) calming, reinforce(C) neglecting, clarity(D) appraising, soften(E) defusing, moderate
184. Unenlightened authoritarian managers rarely recognize a crucial reason for the low levels of serious conflict among members of democratically run work groups: a modicum of tolerance for dissent often prevents _______.(A) demur(B) schism(C) cooperation(D) compliance(E) shortsightedness
185. The natures of social history and lyric poetry are _______, social history always recounting the _______ and lyric poetry speaking for unchanging human nature, that timeless essence beyond fashion and economics.(A) predetermined, bygone(B) antithetical, evanescent(C) interdependent, unnoticed(D) irreconcilable, unalterable(E) indistinguishable, transitory
186. Despite the fact that it is almost universally _______, the practice of indentured servitude still _______ in many parts of the world.(A) condemned, abates(B) tolerated, survives(C) proscribed, persists(D) mandated, lingers(E) disdained, intervenes
187. Ironically, the proper use of figurative language must be based on the denotative meaning of the words, because it is the failure to recognize this _______ meaning that leads to mixed metaphors and their attendant incongruity.(A) esoteric
(B) literal(C) latent(D) allusive(E) symbolic
188. Having sufficient income of her own constituted for Alice _______ independence that made possible a degree of _______ in her emotional life as well.(A) a material, security(B) a profound, conformity(C) a financial, economy(D) a psychological, extravagance(E) an unexpected, uncertainty
189. Mathematics consists of a group of languages that are more stable than any _______ language; mathematical symbols do not _______ their meanings as words do.(A) developed, substitute(B) written, translate(C) traditional, require(D) verbal, change(E) explicit, conceal
190. While many people utilize homeopathic remedies to treat health problems, other people do not _______ such alternative treatments, _______ conventional medical treatments instead.(A) distrust, employing(B) embrace, eschewing(C) reject, envisioning(D) countenance, relying on(E) recommend, turning from
191. Paleontologists’ assumptions about the equable nature of the climate on the primeval island of Pangaea are _______ computer simulations indicating that the island’s temperatures tended to _______ during the course of a year.(A) based on, cool(B) confirmed by, vary(C) challenged by, stabilize(D) bolstered by, soar(E) undermined by, fluctuate
192. Whereas historians once maintained that science is _______ other enterprises, they have come to realize that science is actually _______ the values, social assumptions, and intellectual traditions of a particular historical period.(A) related to, informed by(B) ancillary to, secondary to(C) tantamount to, equivalent to(D) distinct from, intertwined with(E) dependent on, influenced by
193. Chinese art has no _______ the powerfully explicit antiwar paintings of the West, but _______ subtlety and indirection to express political thought.(A) panacea for, passes by(B) diversion from, defers to(C) counterpart for, relies on(D) intimation of, alludes to(E) derivative of, refrains from
194. Breakdowns in communication between intimates may occur because the
_______ of the relationship, ironically, may _______ openness.(A) depth, necessitate(B) closeness, discourage(C) reciprocity, foster(D) juxtaposition, offset(E) precariousness, facilitate
195. Often the argument against philanthropy has the effect of _______ the character of philanthropists but not necessarily _______ their work: they may have done good in spite of themselves.(A) describing, explaining(B) aggrandizing, acknowledging(C) emphasizing, citing(D) impugning, discrediting(E) obscuring, attacking
196. The novelist devotes so much time to avid descriptions of his character’s clothes that the reader soon feels that such _______ concerns, although worthy of attention, have superseded any more directly literary aims.(A) didactic(B) syntactical(C) belletristic(D) sartorial(E) frivolous
197. Carruther’s latest literary criticism _______ her reputation for trenchant commentary; despite its intriguing title and the fulsome praise on its dust jacket, it is nothing more than a collection of _______.(A) reinforces, pronouncements(B) belies, platitudes(C) prejudices, insights(D) advances, aphorisms(E) undermines, judgments
198. The _______ of gamblers’ unsuccessful decision strategies is one _______ of the illusions built into games of chance in order to misguide player and take their money.(A) distortion, outcome(B) restriction, result(C) maintenance, function(D) prediction, accomplishment(E) demonstration, prerequisite
199. That the new group was unable to weather its first staff meeting without evidence of the same _______ that its creation was intended to abolish did not _______ future harmony among coworkers.(A) cooperation, ensure(B) façade, realize(C) factions, augur(D) diligence, subdue(E) ventures, suggest
200. The prevailing union of passionate interest in detailed facts with equal devotion to abstract _______ is a hallmark of our present society; in the past this union appeared, at best, _______ and as if by chance.(A) data, extensively(B) philosophy, cyclically(C) generalization, sporadically
(D) evaluation, opportunely(E) intuition, selectively
201. The author did not see the _______ inherent in her scathing criticism of writing style so similar to her own.(A) disinterest(B) incongruity(C) pessimism(D) compliment(E) symbolism
202. The author is _______ to identify any particular principle as fundamental, insisting instead that it is only when viewed within specific contexts that principles can be _______.(A) reluctant, modified(B) unable, relinquished(C) loath, assessed(D) unlikely, violated(E) wrong, justified
203. As _______ as she was to the widespread dissatisfaction with her performance on the job, it is no wonder that she greeted the news of her dismissal with _______.(A) receptive, disdain(B) acquiescent, temerity(C) oblivious, astonishment(D) vulnerable, uncertainty(E) responsive, apathy
204. The scientist found it puzzling that his rival’s theory retained its _______ despite widespread suggestions that it was now _______.(A) perspective, dated(B) currency, moribund(C) appeal, accepted(D) complexity, unfathomable(E) credibility, recognized
205. Even among findings in the field of nuclear physics that have _______, many have been subject to repeated challenges on the basis of new evidence.(A) arisen(B) survived(C) declined(D) been proposed(E) been questioned
206. The economists were _______ to find that the theory that they had considered _______ crumbled when modern techniques for economic modeling made it possible to make new kinds of observation that contradicted its fundamental assumptions.(A) surprised, problematic(B) overjoyed, useful(C) stunned, invulnerable(D) disappointed, faulty(E) astonished, suspect
207. One reason for the development of junior high schools in the United States was _______: these schools provided an efficient and inexpensive way to avoid overcrowding in the high schools.
(A) inequality(B) parity(C) expediency(D) ineptitude(E) instability
208. Even though some of the variables identified in Chang’s study of personality types are inherently _______, the application of that study’s results predicts human behavior with considerable _______.(A) reliable, accuracy(B) common, universality(C) nebulous, specificity(D) abstruse, error(E) interesting, sophistication
209. Often the difficulties of growing up in the public eye cause child prodigies to _______ the world of achievement before reaching adulthood; happily, they sometimes later return to competition and succeed brilliantly.(A) ridicule(B) conquer(C) retire from(D) antagonize(E) examine
210. That many lawyers have acquired a reputation for _______ even the most solemn and binding undertakings does not _______ discovery of attorneys devoted to both legal and ethical right.(A) enforcing, promote(B) articulating, ensure(C) repudiating, permit(D) disapproving, produce(E) subverting, preclude
211. While some argue that imposing tolls on highway users circumvents the need to raise public taxes for road maintenance, the phenomenal expense of maintaining a vast network of roads _______ reliance on these general taxes.(A) avoids(B) diminishes(C) necessitates(D) discourages(E) ameliorates
212. The skeleton of _______ bird that was recently discovered indicated that this ancient creature _______ today’s birds in that, unlike earlier birds and unlike reptilian ancestors, it had not a tooth in its head.(A) a primeval, obscured(B) a unique, preempted(C) a primitive, anticipated(D) a contemporary, foreshadowed(E) an advanced, differed from
213. According to one political theorist, a regime that has as its goal absolute _______, without any _______ law or principle, has declared war on justice.(A) respectability, codification of(B) supremacy, suppression of(C) autonomy, accountability to(D) fairness, deviation from(E) responsibility, prioritization of
214. The remark was only slightly _______, inviting a chuckle, perhaps, but certainly not a _______.(A) audible, reward(B) hostile, shrug(C) amusing, rebuke(D) coherent, reaction(E) humorous, guffaw
215. Estimating the risks of radiation escaping from a nuclear power plant is _______ question, but one whose answer then becomes part of a value-laden, emotionally charged policy, debate about whether to construct such a plant.(A) an incomprehensible(B) an undefined(C) an irresponsible(D) a divisive(E) a technical
216. Our highly _______ vocabulary for street crime contrasts sharply to our _______ vocabulary for corporate crime, a fact that corresponds to the general public’s unawareness of the extent of corporate crime.(A) nuanced, subtle(B) uninformative, misleading(C) euphemistic, abstract(D) differentiated, limited(E) technical, jargon-laden
217. In modern English very few verb forms can be surely identified as subjunctives, and the use of those few is so irregular that _______ criteria for appropriate usage are hard to infer.(A) obscure(B) irrelevant(C) alternative(D) definite(E) independent
218. Professional photographers generally regard inadvertent surrealism in a photograph as a curse rather than a blessing; magazine photographers, in particular, consider themselves _______ to the extent that they can _______ its presence in their photographs.(A) skillful, enhance(B) inadequate, eliminate(C) original, demonstrate(D) fortunate, minimize(E) conventional, highlight
219. Doors were closing on our past, and soon the values we had lived by would become so obsolete that we would seem to people of the new age as _______ as travelers from an ancient land.(A) elegant(B) ambitious(C) interesting(D) comfortable(E) quaint
220. Mechanisms develop whereby every successful species can _______ its innate capacity for population growth with the constraints that arise through its interactions with the natural environment.
(A) enhance(B) replace(C) produce(D) surpass(E) reconcile
221. It was not the _______ of great wealth – jewels, limousines, palatial houses – that enticed him; rather, he was _______ by the illusion of complete freedom that unlimited financial resources created.(A) grandeur, unconvinced(B) responsibilities, intimidated(C) trappings, seduced(D) pageant, appalled(E) rewards, distressed
222. Ability to _______ is the test of the perceptive historian; a history, after all, consists not only of what the historian has included, but also, in some sense, of what has been left out.(A) defer(B) select(C) confer(D) devise(E) reflect
223. Although the _______ of cases of measles has _______, researchers fear that eradication of the disease, once believed to be imminent, may not come soon.(A) occurrence, continued(B) incidence, declined(C) prediction, resumed(D) number, increased(E) study, begun
224. Because art is a _______ form of human expression, the artist’s approach to creation is _______ personal experience.(A) dispassionate, influenced by(B) typical, detached from(C) unique, detrimental to(D) subjective, colored by(E) figurative, irrelevant to
225. When a person suddenly loses consciousness, a bystander is not expected to _______ the problem but to attempt to _______ its effects by starting vital functions if they are absent.(A) cure, precipitate(B) minimize, predict(C) determine, detect(D) diagnose, counter(E) magnify, evaluate
226. To label the 1950’s in the United States a “golden age” is somewhat _______; general prosperity increased but the gains made by women in the workplace during the Second World War were _______.(A) nostalgic, perpetuated(B) facetious, substantiated(C) disingenuous, modified(D) misleading, eroded(E) hyperbolic, distributed
227. Many of the towns that have voted to keep incinerators in the country’s solid waste plan have done so not because they necessarily _______ incinerators, but because they are _______ to narrow their waste-disposal options.(A) disdain, expecting(B) favor, inclined(C) dote on, eager(D) approve of, loath(E) deplore, unwilling
228. It was lack of ecological awareness that initially allowed physicians to view the new “miracle-cure” antibiotics as a permanent _______ to bacterial infections rather than _______ victory over such diseases.(A) alternative, a major(B) solution, an interim(C) reaction, a strategic(D) answer, a hard-won(E) stimulus, an ephemeral
229. The senator’s attempt to convince the public that he is not interested in running for a second term is _______ given the extremely _______ fund-raising activities of his campaign committee.(A) futile, clandestine(B) sincere, visible(C) specious, apathetic(D) disingenuous, public(E) straightforward, dubious
230. The essays gathered in the volume are characterized by _______ that _______ their disparate origins.(A) a standard, undermines(B) a permanence, distorts(C) a similarity, reinforces(D) a unity, belies(E) an incompatibility, disguises
231. Though he refused any responsibility for the failure of the negotiations, Stevenson had no right to _______ himself: it was his _______ that had caused the debacle.(A) blame, skill(B) congratulate, modesty(C) berate, largesse(D) accuse, obstinacy(E) absolve, acrimony
232. To this reviewer, Esterman’s play was a thoroughly _______ exercise: both its laughter and its tears seemed equally _______.(A) plausible, improbable(B) trivial, solemn(C) sentimental, understated(D) artificial, specious(E) creative, stilted
233. Although a change in management may appear to _______ a shift in a company’s fortunes, more often than not its impact is _______.(A) hinder, measurable(B) promote, demonstrable(C) accelerate, profound
(D) betray, fundamental(E) augur, inconsiderable
234. Journalists often described the incumbent senator as politically _______, despite the fact that his record had established him as a more _______ assessor of political possibilities and personalities than either of his opponents had shown themselves to be.(A) pragmatic, efficient(B) opportunistic, seasoned(C) naïve, shrewd(D) inept, inexperienced(E) astute, reliable
235. Candidates who oppose the present state income tax must be able to propose _______ way to _______ the financing of state operations.(A) intelligent, initiate(B) individual, diversify(C) innovative, alleviate(D) arbitrary, maintain(E) alternate, continue
236. Social tensions among adult factions can be _______ by politics, but adolescents and children have no such _______ for resolving their conflict with the exclusive world of adults.(A) intensified, attitude(B) complicated, relief(C) frustrated, justification(D) adjusted, mechanism(E) revealed, opportunity
237. Exposure to low-intensity gamma radiation slows the rate of growth of the spoilage microorganisms in food in much the same way that the low heat used in pasteurization _______ the spoilage action of the microorganisms in milk.(A) precludes(B) initiates(C) inhibits(D) isolates(E) purifies
238. Kagan maintains that an infant’s reactions to its first stressful experiences are part of a natural process of development, not harbingers of childhood unhappiness or _______ signs of adolescent anxiety.(A) prophetic(B) normal(C) monotonous(D) virtual(E) typical
239. Physicists rejected the innovative experimental technique because, although it _______ some problems, it also produced new _______.(A) clarified, data(B) eased, interpretations(C) resolved, complications(D) caused, hypotheses(E) revealed, inconsistencies
240. Marison was a scientist of unusual _______ and imagination who had startling success in _______ new and fundamental principles well in advance of
their general recognition.(A) restiveness, acknowledging(B) precision, coordinating(C) aggression, resisting(D) candor, dispelling(E) insight, discerning
241. Her _______ should not be confused with miserliness; as long as I have known her, she has always been willing to assist those who are in need.(A) intemperance(B) intolerance(C) apprehension(D) diffidence(E) frugality
242. Although ancient tools were _______ preserved, enough have survived to allow us to demonstrate an occasionally interrupted but generally _______.(A) partially, noticeable(B) superficially, necessary(C) unwittingly, documented(D) rarely, continual(E) needlessly, incessant
243. It is puzzling to observe that Jones’s novel has recently been criticized for its _______ structure, since commentators have traditionally argued that its most obvious _______ is its relentlessly rigid, indeed schematic, framework.(A) attention to, preoccupation(B) speculation about, characteristic(C) parody of, disparity(D) violation of, contradiction(E) lack of, flaw
244. The spellings of many Old English words have been _______ in the living language, although their pronunciations have changed.(A) preserved(B) shortened(C) preempted(D) revised(E) improved
245. In the machinelike world of classical physics, the human intellect appears _______, since the mechanical nature of classical physics does not _______ creative reasoning, the very ability that had made the formulation of classical principles possible.(A) anomalous, allow for(B) abstract, speak to(C) anachronistic, deny(D) enduring, value(E) contradictory, exclude
246. For some time now, _______ has been presumed not to exist: the cynical conviction that everybody has an angle is considered wisdom.(A) rationality(B) flexibility(C) diffidence(D) disinterestedness(E) insincerity
247. The characterization of historical analysis as a form of fiction is not likely to be received _______ by either historians or literary critics, who agree that history and fiction deal with _______ orders of experience.(A) quietly, significant(B) enthusiastically, sting(C) passively, unusual(D) sympathetically, distinct(E) contentiously, realistic
248. The state is a network of exchanged benefits and beliefs, _______ between rulers and citizens based on those laws and procedures that are _______ to the maintenance of community.(A) compromise, inimical(B) an interdependence, subsidiary(C) a counterpoint, incidental(D) an equivalence, prerequisite(E) a reciprocity, conducive
249. It comes as no surprise that societies have codes of behavior; the character of the codes, on the other hand, can often be _______.(A) predictable(B) unexpected(C) admirable(D) explicit(E) confusing
250. In a _______ society that worships efficiency, it is difficult for a sensitive and idealistic person to make the kinds of _______ decisions that alone spell success as it is defined by such a society.(A) bureaucratic, edifying(B) pragmatic, hardheaded(C) rational, well-intentioned(D) competitive, evenhanded(E) modern, dysfunctional
251. The _______ of mass literacy coincided with the first industrial revolution; in turn, the new expansion in literacy, as well as cheaper printing, helped to nurture the _______ of popular literature.(A) building, mistrust(B) reappearance, display(C) receipt, source(D) selection, influence(E) emergence, rise
252. Like many eighteenth-century scholars who lived by cultivating those in power, Winckelmann neglected to neutralize, by some _______ gesture of comradeship, the resentment his peers were bound to feel because of his _______ the high and mighty.(A) quixotic, intrigue with(B) enigmatic, familiarity with(C) propitiatory, involvement with(D) salutary, questioning of(E) unfeigned, sympathy for
253. Far from viewing Jefferson as a skeptical but enlightened intellectual, historians of the 1960’s portrayed him as _______ thinker, eager to fill the young with his political orthodoxy while censuring ideas he did not like.(A) an adventurous
(B) a doctrinaire(C) an eclectic(D) a judicious(E) a cynical
254. To have true disciples, a thinker must not be too _______: any effective intellectual leader depends on the ability of other people to _______ thought processes that did not originate with them.(A) popular, dismiss(B) methodical, interpret(C) idiosyncratic, reenact(D) self-confident, revitalize(E) pragmatic, discourage
255. In the midst of so many evasive comments, this forthright statement, what ever its intrinsic merit, plainly stands out as _______.(A) a paradigm(B) a misnomer(C) a profundity(D) an inaccuracy(E) an anomaly
256. Our biological uniqueness requires that the effects of a substance must be verified by _______ experiments, even after thousands of tests of the effects of that substance on animals.(A) controlled(B) random(C) replicated(D) human(E) evolutionary
257. For years manufacturers have tried to make chocolate synthetically, with _______ success, because chocolate contains hundreds of substances and no one knows which are responsible for its _______ flavor.(A) commercial, special(B) average, true(C) little, distinctive(D) meager, artificial(E) considerable, specific
258. From Neolithic pottery to twentieth-century posters, the extent and variety of the arts in China _______ those who search for continuity; nonetheless, certain _______ values are reflected in China’s artistic traditions.(A) confound, enduring(B) abet, pervasive(C) inform, intangible(D) entice, diverse(E) alienate, distinctive
259. In today’s world, manufacturer’s innovations are easily copied and thus differences between products are usually _______; advertisers, therefore, are forced to _______ these differences in order to suggest the uniqueness of their clients’ products.(A) crucial, downplay(B) minimal, reduce(C) slight, exaggerate(D) common, emphasize(E) intrinsic, create
260. The critics’ evident _______ the new production was somewhat _______ by their high regard for the playwright’s previous work.(A) admiration for, offset(B) curiosity about, dampened(C) hostility toward, tempered(D) disappointment in, disguised(E) awareness of, frustrated
261. There is hardly a generalization that can be made about people’s social behavior and the values informing it that cannot be _______ from one or another point of view, or even _______ as simplistic or vapid.(A) accepted, praised(B) intuited, exposed(C) harangued, retracted(D) defended, glorified(E) challenged, dismissed
262. What these people were waiting for would not have been apparent to others and was perhaps not very _______ their own minds.(A) obscure to(B) intimate to(C) illusory to(D) difficult to(E) definite in
Sentence Completion Answers2009-07-02, [email protected]
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