Friday, September 21, 2012

Sentence Completion Questions Chapter 11

Chapter 11
251.   The queen's ______ fell ill during his journey and was unable to
negotiate on her behalf when he arrived at the economic summit.
a.  penury
b.  miscreant
c.  emissary
d.  denizen
e.  zealot

252.   Tai was ______ by a series of setbacks that nearly made him miss
his deadline.
a.  ensconced
b.  relegated
c.  beleaguered
d.  solicited
e.  winnowed


253.   New York boasts many ______ restaurants—places that are elegant
and frequented by famous movie stars, political figures, and other
elite members of society.
a.  pungent
b.  posh
c.  diminutive
d.  mediocre
e.  middling

254.   Patsy was shocked to discover how much higher her IQ was than
the ______.
a.  norm
b.  stimulation
c.  prudence
d.  solitude
e.  derivative

255.   Although she appeared confident, once she began her speech, the
valedictorian's ______ voice indicated her nervousness.
a.  supercilious
b.  resonant
c.  tenuous
d.  placating
e.  tremulous

256.   Danielle cannot seem to find her niche in life; she has changed her
______ at least three times in the past ten years.
a.  automation
b.  vocation
c.  plethora
d.  pliancy
e.  combustion


257.   The discovery of the new element was ______; the scientist was
looking for something else.
a.  insignificant
b.  intrepid
c.  eloquent
d.  inadvertent
e.  emollient

258.   A charming painting of a pleasant ______ landscape hung above
Vitaly's fireplace, in marked contrast to the noise and lights of the
bustling city outside his window.
a.  nascent
b.  histrionic
c.  bucolic
d.  indigenous
e.  ersatz

259.   Aidan, who has always been painfully shy, was very ______ by the
news that he would have to do a presentation in front of his
classmates.
a.  discomfited
b.  circumvented
c.  relegated
d.  promulgated
e.  castigated

260.   Since his parents had little money, Peter was ______ to his uncle
for paying for his college education.
a.  alleged
b.  provided
c.  obliged
d.  demented
e.  fortified


261.   With great ______, we stepped gingerly onto the planks of the
dilapidated bridge that spanned a rocky stream twenty feet below.
a.  trepidation
b.  instigation
c.  perdition
d.  refraction
e.  endowment

262.   At the risk of sounding like an ______, the teacher assigned extra
homework for the weekend.
a.  oaf
b.  ogre
c.  impost
d.  alcove
e.  anathema

263.   Felix felt that his mother's request to run her errands was a huge
______ since he would have rather watched a soccer match with his
friends that afternoon.
a.  justification
b.  imposition
c.  preponderance
d.  deviation
e.  recourse

264.   The paper was ______ so that it could be easily removed from the
bound notebook.
a.  voracious
b.  infectious
c.  fickle
d.  perforated
e.  fluent


265.   The mad scientist ______ the potion with acid, making it not only
useless, but also dangerous.
a.  corrugated
b.  vitiated
c.  implemented
d.  instigated
e.  titillated

266.   Jayne's paintings were not minimalist, but they were ______, using
only the most elemental and essential elements.
a.  elliptical
b.  truculent
c.  pernicious
d.  perfunctory
e.  abstemious

267.   Wendell's prolonged illness was the ______ that ignited his interest
in science and led to his illustrious career in medical research.
a.  hyperbole
b.  catalyst
c.  penchant
d.  insolence
e.  caveat

268.   Stopping to admire the ______ in the front yard, the young woman
continued on with her gardening duties.
a.  paradigm
b.  compost
c.  clutter
d.  oleander
e.  patagium

269.   The river, ______ with new-fallen rain, overflowed its banks and
flooded the tiny village in a matter of hours.
a.  placated
b.  turgid
c.  redundant
d.  equivalent
e.  quarantined


270.   In a(n) ______ expression of pleasure, the infant clapped her hands
and squealed with joy.
a.  overt
b.  obligatory
c.  illusive
d.  peremptory
e.  turbulent

271.   Paula's ______ humor does not amuse many people; rather many
find it offensive and hurtful.
a.  nebulous
b.  truncated
c.  stoic
d.  vitriolic
e.  flirtatious

272.   The play's ______ debut was not a good sign for the struggling
producer.
a.  unsubstantial
b.  inauspicious
c.  copious
d.  disembodied
e.  immaterial

273.   At one time it was in ______ for women to wear gloves and hats
whenever they were out in public.
a.  gore
b.  gauge
c.  vogue
d.  brawn
e.  vain

274.   To ensure that Brenda wouldn't know where we were going for her
birthday, I took the most ______ route I could think of.
a.  ardent
b.  craven
c.  enigmatic
d.  circuitous
e.  mercurial
9 6


501 Sentence Completion Questions

275.   The editorial was essentially a(n) ______ to the governor, praising
her for her enactment of a series of environmental laws and for
balancing the state budget for the first time in 20 years.
a.  juggernaut
b.  imprecation
c.  cabal
d.  oeuvre
e.  encomium

Answers

251.   c.  An emissary (n.) is an agent sent on a mission to represent the
interests of someone else.

252.   c.  To beleaguer (v.) is to harass, beset, besiege.

253.   b.  Posh (adj.) means elegant and fashionable.

254.   a.  A norm (n.) is an average standard, pattern, or type.

255.   e.  Tremulous (adj.) means characterized by quivering or
unsteadiness.

256.   b.  Vocation (n.) means a regular occupation or profession.

257.   d.  Inadvertent (adj.) means not attentive or heedless; acting
carelessly; unintentional.

258.   c.  Bucolic (adj.) means of or characteristic of country life or people,
rustic, especially in an idealized sense; of or characteristic of
shepherds or herdsmen, pastoral.

259.   a.  To discomfit (v.) means to make uneasy, disconcert; to cause to
lose one's composure; to break up or thwart the plans of,
frustrate.

260.   c.  Obliged (v.) means to be indebted.

261.   a.  Trepidation (n.) means nervous uncertainty of feeling.

262.   b.  An ogre (n.) is, in popular usage, a cruel person, or a monster.

263.   b.  Imposition (n.) is the act of imposing something such as a burden
or duty; an unfair demand.

264.   d.  Perforated (adj.) means with a line of holes to facilitate
separation; pierced with a pointed instrument.


265.   b.  To vitiate (v.) means to spoil; to make faulty or impure; to
corrupt morally.

266.   a.  Elliptical (adj.) means characterized by extreme economy of
words or style; of, relating to, or having the shape of an ellipsis.

267.   b.  A catalyst (n.) is something that precipitates or causes a process
or event; (in chemistry) a substance that initiates or accelerates a
chemical reaction without itself being affected in the process.

268.   d.  An oleander (n.) is a beautiful but poisonous evergreen shrub.

269.   b.  Turgid (adj.) means swollen.

270.   a.  Overt (adj.) means apparent, obvious.

271.   d.  Vitriolic (adj.) means bitterly scathing; caustic.

272.   b.  Inauspicious (adj.) means not favorable or unfortunate; not
promising success.

273.   c.  Vogue (n.) means the prevalent way or fashion.

274.   d.  Circuitous (adj.) means having or taking a roundabout, lengthy,
or indirect course.

275.   e.  Encomium (n.) means a formal expression of praise, a glowing
tribute.

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