Chapter 2
26. Phillip's ______ tone endeared him to his comical friends, but
irritated his serious father.
a. aloof
b. jesting
c. grave
d. earnest
e. conservative
27. Brian's pale Irish skin was ______ to burn if he spent too much
time in the sun.
a. prone
b. urbane
c. eminent
d. erect
e. daunted
28. A fan of historical fiction, Joline is now reading a novel about
slavery in the ______ South.
a. decorous
b. rogue
c. droll
d. antebellum
e. onerous
29. Over the years the Wilsons slowly ______ upon the Jacksons'
property, moving the stone markers that divided their lots farther
and farther onto the Jacksons' land.
a. encroached
b. jettisoned
c. conjoined
d. repudiated
e. teemed
30. Mary became ______ at typing because she practiced every day for
six months.
a. proficient
b. reflective
c. dormant
d. redundant
e. valiant
31. To find out what her husband bought for her birthday, Susan
attempted to ______ his family members about his recent shopping
excursions.
a. prescribe
b. probe
c. alienate
d. converge
e. revere
32. Juan's friends found him in a ______ mood after he learned he
would be homecoming king.
a. jovial
b. stealthy
c. paltry
d. gullible
e. depleted
33. His suit of armor made the knight ______ to his enemy's attack,
and he was able to escape safely to his castle.
a. vulnerable
b. churlish
c. invulnerable
d. static
e. imprudent
34. Choosing a small, fuel-efficient car is a ______ purchase for a
recent college graduate.
a. corrupt
b. tedious
c. unhallowed
d. sardonic
e. judicious
35. Such a ______ violation of school policy should be punished by
nothing less than expulsion.
a. copious
b. flagrant
c. raucous
d. nominal
e. morose
36. With all of the recent negative events in her life, she felt ______
forces must be at work.
a. resurgent
b. premature
c. malignant
d. punctilious
e. antecedent
37. The ______ rumors did a great deal of damage even though they
turned out to be false.
a. bemused
b. prosaic
c. apocryphal
d. ebullient
e. tantamount
38. When her schoolwork got to be too much, Pam had a tendency to
______, which always put her further behind.
a. dedicate
b. rejuvenate
c. ponder
d. excel
e. procrastinate
39. Racha's glance was a ______ invitation to speak later in private
about events of the meeting.
a. trecherous
b. scintillating
c. tactful
d. tacit
e. taboo
40. She reached the ______ of her career with her fourth novel, which
won the Pulitzer Prize.
a. harbinger
b. apogee
c. metamorphosis
d. dictum
e. synthesis
41. The ______ townspeople celebrated the soldier's return to his
home by adorning trees with yellow ribbons and balloons.
a. somber
b. jubilant
c. pitiless
d. cunning
e. unsullied
42. The governor-elect was hounded by a group of ______ lobbyists
and others hoping to gain favor with her administration.
a. facetious
b. abstruse
c. magnanimous
d. fawning
e. saccharine
43. The mock graduation ceremony—with a trained skunk posing as
the college president—was a complete ______ that offended many
college officials.
a. tempest
b. epitome
c. quintessence
d. travesty
e. recitative
44. The busy, ______ fabric of the clown's tie matched his oversized
jacket, which was equally atrocious.
a. mottled
b. bleak
c. credible
d. malleable
e. communicable
45. Kendrick's talent ______ under the tutelage of Anya Kowalonek,
who as a young woman had been the most accomplished pianist in
her native Lithuania.
a. bantered
b. touted
c. flourished
d. embellished
e. colluded
46. The children were ______ by the seemingly nonsensical clues until
Kinan pointed out that the messages were in code.
a. censured
b. striated
c. feigned
d. prevaricated
e. flummoxed
47. As the ______ in Romeo and Juliet, Romeo is a hero able to
capture the audience's sympathy by continually professing his love
for Juliet.
a. protagonist
b. enigma
c. facade
d. activist
e. catechist
48. The chess master promised to ______ havoc upon his opponent's
pawns for taking his bishop.
a. wreak
b. warrant
c. ensue
d. placate
e. endow
49. I have always admired Seymour's ______; I've never seen him
rattled by anything.
a. aplomb
b. confluence
c. propriety
d. compunction
e. nostalgia
50. The soldiers received a military ______ to inspect all their vehicles
before traveling.
a. allotment
b. dominion
c. affectation
d. calculation
e. mandate
Answers
26. b. Jesting (adj.) means characterized by making jests; joking;
playful.
27. a. Prone (adj.) means a tendency or inclination to something.
28. d. Antebellum (adj.) means belonging to the period before a war,
especially the American Civil War.
29. a. To encroach (v.) means to gradually or stealthily take the rights
or possessions of another; to advance beyond proper or formal
limits; trespass.
30. a. Proficient (adj.) means well versed in any business or branch of
learning; adept.
31. b. To probe (v.) is to examine thoroughly; tentatively survey.
32. a. Jovial (adj.) means showing hearty good cheer; marked with the
spirit of jolly merriment.
33. c. Invulnerable (adj.) means incapable of being damaged or
wounded; unassailable or invincible.
34. e. Judicious (adj.) means being wise or prudent; showing good
judgment; sensible.
35. b. Flagrant (adj.) means conspicuously and outrageously bad,
offensive, or reprehensible.
36. c. Malignant (adj.) means disposed to cause distress or inflict
suffering intentionally; inclining to produce death; an injurious
infiltration.
37. c. Apocryphal (adj.) means of questionable authenticity or doubtful
authority; fictitious, false.
38. e. To procrastinate (v.) is to put off from day to day.
39. c. Tacit (adj.) means unspoken yet understood.
40. b. Apogee (n.) means the highest or farthest point, culmination; the
point in its orbit where a satellite is at the greatest distance from
the body it is orbiting.
41. b. Jubilant (adj.) means rejoicing; expressing joyfulness; exulting.
42. d. Fawning (adj.) means attempting to win favor or attention by
excessive flattery, ingratiating displays of affection, or servile
compliance; obsequious.
43. d. Travesty (n.) means a parody; a grotesque imitation with the
intent to ridicule.
44. a. Mottled (adj.) means blotched or spotted with different colors or
shades.
45. c. To flourish (v.) is (of artists) to be in a state of high productivity,
excellence, or influence; to grow luxuriously, thrive; to fare well,
prosper, increase in wealth, honor, comfort or whatever is
desirable; to make bold, sweeping movements.
46. e. To flummox (v.) is to confuse, perplex, bewilder.
47. a. A protagonist (n.) is the main character in a drama.
48. a. To wreak (v.) means to inflict, as a revenge or punishment.
49. a. Aplomb (n.) is self-assurance, composure, poise, especially under
strain.
50. e. Mandate (n.) is a command or authoritative instruction.
26. Phillip's ______ tone endeared him to his comical friends, but
irritated his serious father.
a. aloof
b. jesting
c. grave
d. earnest
e. conservative
27. Brian's pale Irish skin was ______ to burn if he spent too much
time in the sun.
a. prone
b. urbane
c. eminent
d. erect
e. daunted
28. A fan of historical fiction, Joline is now reading a novel about
slavery in the ______ South.
a. decorous
b. rogue
c. droll
d. antebellum
e. onerous
29. Over the years the Wilsons slowly ______ upon the Jacksons'
property, moving the stone markers that divided their lots farther
and farther onto the Jacksons' land.
a. encroached
b. jettisoned
c. conjoined
d. repudiated
e. teemed
30. Mary became ______ at typing because she practiced every day for
six months.
a. proficient
b. reflective
c. dormant
d. redundant
e. valiant
31. To find out what her husband bought for her birthday, Susan
attempted to ______ his family members about his recent shopping
excursions.
a. prescribe
b. probe
c. alienate
d. converge
e. revere
32. Juan's friends found him in a ______ mood after he learned he
would be homecoming king.
a. jovial
b. stealthy
c. paltry
d. gullible
e. depleted
33. His suit of armor made the knight ______ to his enemy's attack,
and he was able to escape safely to his castle.
a. vulnerable
b. churlish
c. invulnerable
d. static
e. imprudent
34. Choosing a small, fuel-efficient car is a ______ purchase for a
recent college graduate.
a. corrupt
b. tedious
c. unhallowed
d. sardonic
e. judicious
35. Such a ______ violation of school policy should be punished by
nothing less than expulsion.
a. copious
b. flagrant
c. raucous
d. nominal
e. morose
36. With all of the recent negative events in her life, she felt ______
forces must be at work.
a. resurgent
b. premature
c. malignant
d. punctilious
e. antecedent
37. The ______ rumors did a great deal of damage even though they
turned out to be false.
a. bemused
b. prosaic
c. apocryphal
d. ebullient
e. tantamount
38. When her schoolwork got to be too much, Pam had a tendency to
______, which always put her further behind.
a. dedicate
b. rejuvenate
c. ponder
d. excel
e. procrastinate
39. Racha's glance was a ______ invitation to speak later in private
about events of the meeting.
a. trecherous
b. scintillating
c. tactful
d. tacit
e. taboo
40. She reached the ______ of her career with her fourth novel, which
won the Pulitzer Prize.
a. harbinger
b. apogee
c. metamorphosis
d. dictum
e. synthesis
41. The ______ townspeople celebrated the soldier's return to his
home by adorning trees with yellow ribbons and balloons.
a. somber
b. jubilant
c. pitiless
d. cunning
e. unsullied
42. The governor-elect was hounded by a group of ______ lobbyists
and others hoping to gain favor with her administration.
a. facetious
b. abstruse
c. magnanimous
d. fawning
e. saccharine
43. The mock graduation ceremony—with a trained skunk posing as
the college president—was a complete ______ that offended many
college officials.
a. tempest
b. epitome
c. quintessence
d. travesty
e. recitative
44. The busy, ______ fabric of the clown's tie matched his oversized
jacket, which was equally atrocious.
a. mottled
b. bleak
c. credible
d. malleable
e. communicable
45. Kendrick's talent ______ under the tutelage of Anya Kowalonek,
who as a young woman had been the most accomplished pianist in
her native Lithuania.
a. bantered
b. touted
c. flourished
d. embellished
e. colluded
46. The children were ______ by the seemingly nonsensical clues until
Kinan pointed out that the messages were in code.
a. censured
b. striated
c. feigned
d. prevaricated
e. flummoxed
47. As the ______ in Romeo and Juliet, Romeo is a hero able to
capture the audience's sympathy by continually professing his love
for Juliet.
a. protagonist
b. enigma
c. facade
d. activist
e. catechist
48. The chess master promised to ______ havoc upon his opponent's
pawns for taking his bishop.
a. wreak
b. warrant
c. ensue
d. placate
e. endow
49. I have always admired Seymour's ______; I've never seen him
rattled by anything.
a. aplomb
b. confluence
c. propriety
d. compunction
e. nostalgia
50. The soldiers received a military ______ to inspect all their vehicles
before traveling.
a. allotment
b. dominion
c. affectation
d. calculation
e. mandate
Answers
26. b. Jesting (adj.) means characterized by making jests; joking;
playful.
27. a. Prone (adj.) means a tendency or inclination to something.
28. d. Antebellum (adj.) means belonging to the period before a war,
especially the American Civil War.
29. a. To encroach (v.) means to gradually or stealthily take the rights
or possessions of another; to advance beyond proper or formal
limits; trespass.
30. a. Proficient (adj.) means well versed in any business or branch of
learning; adept.
31. b. To probe (v.) is to examine thoroughly; tentatively survey.
32. a. Jovial (adj.) means showing hearty good cheer; marked with the
spirit of jolly merriment.
33. c. Invulnerable (adj.) means incapable of being damaged or
wounded; unassailable or invincible.
34. e. Judicious (adj.) means being wise or prudent; showing good
judgment; sensible.
35. b. Flagrant (adj.) means conspicuously and outrageously bad,
offensive, or reprehensible.
36. c. Malignant (adj.) means disposed to cause distress or inflict
suffering intentionally; inclining to produce death; an injurious
infiltration.
37. c. Apocryphal (adj.) means of questionable authenticity or doubtful
authority; fictitious, false.
38. e. To procrastinate (v.) is to put off from day to day.
39. c. Tacit (adj.) means unspoken yet understood.
40. b. Apogee (n.) means the highest or farthest point, culmination; the
point in its orbit where a satellite is at the greatest distance from
the body it is orbiting.
41. b. Jubilant (adj.) means rejoicing; expressing joyfulness; exulting.
42. d. Fawning (adj.) means attempting to win favor or attention by
excessive flattery, ingratiating displays of affection, or servile
compliance; obsequious.
43. d. Travesty (n.) means a parody; a grotesque imitation with the
intent to ridicule.
44. a. Mottled (adj.) means blotched or spotted with different colors or
shades.
45. c. To flourish (v.) is (of artists) to be in a state of high productivity,
excellence, or influence; to grow luxuriously, thrive; to fare well,
prosper, increase in wealth, honor, comfort or whatever is
desirable; to make bold, sweeping movements.
46. e. To flummox (v.) is to confuse, perplex, bewilder.
47. a. A protagonist (n.) is the main character in a drama.
48. a. To wreak (v.) means to inflict, as a revenge or punishment.
49. a. Aplomb (n.) is self-assurance, composure, poise, especially under
strain.
50. e. Mandate (n.) is a command or authoritative instruction.
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