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Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - GRE MCQ


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15 Questions MCQ Test Verbal Reasoning for GRE - Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1

Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 for GRE 2024 is part of Verbal Reasoning for GRE preparation. The Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 questions and answers have been prepared according to the GRE exam syllabus.The Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 MCQs are made for GRE 2024 Exam. Find important definitions, questions, notes, meanings, examples, exercises, MCQs and online tests for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 below.
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*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 1

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

Although the Industrial revolution brought about a raft of new techniques in the area of machine design, the methods used for the printing and binding of books continued ___________ till the early years of the 20th century.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 1

Meanings for the words given in this question are provided in the table. Before going through the detailed explanation, check whether you are able to arrive at the answer after knowing meanings for the words.

Let us start by focusing on the keyword. The word that holds the key to understanding the meaning of this sentence is “Although”. We know that the word “Although” implies contrast. It means that something that happened was not expected to happen.

In the context of this sentence:
The industrial revolution brought about a lot of changes and new techniques in the area of machine design. So what is the expected result of that? We might expect these new changes to bring changes and improvements in printing and book binding. However the word “although” indicates that the author says that this did NOT happen. So printing and book binding must have remained the same.

This rules out all the answer options except C and E. The techniques remained unchanged and unmodified. Note that the words which you select as answer options need not be the same, but the sentence has to have the same overall meaning when you plug in the answer options.

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 2

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

Her snide remarks, her simpering smile, and above all, her unceasing insubordination drove Katie to conclude that her teenage daughter was the most ________ child that had ever lived.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 2

Word clues such as “simper,” “snide,” and “insubordination” indicate that Katie’s daughter is rebellious. (B) zealous and (D) primal, even if you’re not sure what they mean, don’t have synonyms in the sentence. (A) docile means teachable, which are too positive for the sentence. The answer is (C) incorrigible, which means unreformable, and (E) irredeemable.

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*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 3

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

She was so _____ that she never noticed the problems that other people were facing.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 3

Both "oblivious" and "inattentive" convey the meaning of not being aware or paying attention to something.

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 4

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

The ___________ tone and appealing image of American Rock and Roll and blues musicians became popular with British youth in the late 1950s.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 4

Meanings for the words given in this question are provided in the table. Before going through the detailed explanation, check whether you are able to arrive at the answer after knowing meanings for the words.

This sentence asks you to make a judgment on the quality of music which makes it popular among audiences. We know from the second half of the sentence that the musicians became popular with youth. The blank should contain a word which makes these musicians popular.

At this point, you can pause and ask yourself what kind of music would make musicians popular. Is it music that sounds good or bad? Music that sounds good, of course. That immediately rules out the words hoarse, cacophony and dissonant – all of which are words that describe bad noise. We are left with dulcet, bohemian, all of which are “positive” words.

The author talks about the image of the musicians as well as the tone of their music. The sentence clearly emphasizes the tone AS WELL AS the image of the musicians. But what does the blank describe? Does the blank describe both the tone AND the image? No, because the word in the blank describes the tone whereas the word “appealing” describes the image. So the blank has to be filled with a word that can describe a sound. Can a tone be dulcet or bohemian? Yes. 

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 5

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

While many find the writings of early feminist writers such as Mary Woolstonecraft to be enlightening and still relevant, others find their writings ________.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 5

The phrase “While many…others” implies a contradiction within the sentence. Thus, the answer should be opposite in meaning to “enlightening” or “continually relevant.” Your word to fit the blank might be something like “obsolete” or “irrelevant.” (A) archaic and (D) antediluvian both mean outdated. A trick answer is (B) inane, which means empty or silly. This would make sense in the context of the sentence, but since none of the other answer choices are a close synonym, (B) cannot be an answer. The answer is (A) and (D).

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 6

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

The politician's speech was filled with _____ that it bored the audience.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 6

Both "platitudes" and "truisms" refer to overused or clichéd statements that lack originality and interest.

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 7

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

Fellow journalists Eric Sevareid, Ed Bliss and Alexander Kendrick considered Murrow one of journalism's greatest figures, noting his honesty and ___________ in delivering the news.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 7

Meanings for the words given in this question are provided in the table. Before going through the detailed explanation, check whether you are able to arrive at the answer after knowing meanings for the words.

This is a relatively straightforward sentence in which the blank has to describe the journalist Murrow. We know what fellow journalists think of Murrow. They consider him one of journalism's greatest figures, who delivered news honestly. So what kind of word would fill the blank? A positive word or a negative one?

The word in the blank has to be of course a positive one. That rules out answer options D, B, E and F, leaving us with A and C.

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 8

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

Judith feigned a forgotten wallet to evade paying for dinner, proving she had surpassed frugality and become ________.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 8

Since she has “surpassed frugality,” the blank must mean frugal to a greater degree. Look for words then that mean “cheap.” The answer is (a) and (e).

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 9

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

The movie's _____ plot made it difficult for the viewers to follow the story.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 9

Both "convoluted" and "intricate" describe something complex and difficult to follow or understand.

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 10

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

His writing of "Common Sense" was so influential in ___________ the Revolutionary War that John Adams reportedly said, "Without the pen of the author of 'Common Sense', the sword of Washington would have been raised in vain.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 10

Meanings for the words given in this question are provided in the table. Before going through the detailed explanation, check whether you are able to arrive at the answer after knowing meanings for the words.

t is very helpful to understand the background story before attempting to answer any sentence equivalence question. So, what do we know about the story behind this sentence? Can we construct a story with the details provided in the sentence?

“Common Sense” might be a book. Who wrote it? Was John Adams the author? No, because according to the quote in the sentence, John Adams spoke about the author of “Common Sense”. So the book was clearly written by someone else. Now, what does John Adams think about the book? Let us look to his quote to understand his view. He says, quite poetically, that “without the pen of the author, the sword of Washington would have been raised in vain” (Does that remind you of something? The pen being mightier than the sword?)

The point that John Adams wants to make is that the Pen (figuratively the ideas and thoughts) are so important that without these ideas that were expressed in his book, the battle (represented by sword) would have been pointless. Adams seems to think that the ideas were the cause and the battle was the end result.

So the writing of Common sense was influential in (use your own word here)...encouraging, inducing or triggering the revolutionary war.

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 11

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

Bradford’s many notorious trysts with various supermodels have earned him a reputation as a ________.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 11

Know your vocabulary, and use process of elimination. If he has trysts with supermodels, he is probably known as a womanizer. Eliminate the answers you know don’t mean that, such as (B) philanthropist, (E) patriarch. The answer is (A) and (D).

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 12

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

The scientist's discovery was _____, as it had the potential to change the course of medicine.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 12

Both "momentous" and "groundbreaking" convey the meaning of being very important or significant.

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 13

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

Coetzee is known to be reclusive, and he __________ publicity to such an extent that he did not collect either of his two Booker Prizes in person.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 13

Meanings for the words given in this question are provided in the table. Before going through the detailed explanation, check whether you are able to arrive at the answer after knowing meanings for the words.

This is a simple sentence which presents a blank before the word “publicity”. Coetzee is known to be reclusive, and a reclusive person is solitary and keeps to himself/herself. How would such a person react to being in the spotlight? A shy person would not want to be in the spotlight. So, Coetzee shuns or avoids publicity. This rules out the words welcomes, courts and gathers. This leaves us with options B and D. The Correct Answer is B and D.

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 14

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

Existential philosophers such as Friedrich Nietzsche are known for focusing on the subjective aspects of life rather than the ________.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 14

The phrase “rather than” lets us know the blank is opposite in meaning to “subjective.” You might come up with the word “objective” for the blank. The answer is (c) and (e).

*Multiple options can be correct
Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 15

Direction: Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning. 

The teacher's explanation was so _____ that everyone in the class could understand the concept.

Detailed Solution for Test: Sentence Equivalence - 1 - Question 15

Both "lucid" and "clear" describe something that is easily understood and not confusing.

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