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Words in Context Test- 1 - SAT MCQ


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5 Questions MCQ Test Reading and Writing for Digital SAT - Words in Context Test- 1

Words in Context Test- 1 for SAT 2024 is part of Reading and Writing for Digital SAT preparation. The Words in Context Test- 1 questions and answers have been prepared according to the SAT exam syllabus.The Words in Context Test- 1 MCQs are made for SAT 2024 Exam. Find important definitions, questions, notes, meanings, examples, exercises, MCQs and online tests for Words in Context Test- 1 below.
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Words in Context Test- 1 - Question 1

In recommending Bao Phi's collection Sông I Sing, a librarian noted that pieces by the spoken-word poet don't lose their ______ nature when printed: the language has the same pleasant musical quality on the page as it does when performed by Phi.

Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word or phrase?

Detailed Solution for Words in Context Test- 1 - Question 1

We've never read Bao Phi's poetry, so how are we supposed to know what the poems are like? Well, luckily we don't have to.

If we look at the second part of the prompt text (the part after the colon), it tells us what Bao Phi's poems are like: they have a "pleasant musical quality". The most precise word in this context will emphasize the same positive association with music.

"Melodic" also means pleasant and musical, so it best emphasizes the point being made in context. The answer is (C).

Words in Context Test- 1 - Question 2

Some foraging models predict that the distance bees travel when foraging will decline as floral density increases, but biologists Shalene Jha and Claire Kremen showed that bees' behavior is inconsistent with this prediction if flowers in dense patches are ______: bees will forage beyond patches of low species richness to acquire multiple resource types.

Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word or phrase?

Detailed Solution for Words in Context Test- 1 - Question 2

Choice A. This doesn't fit the logic of the text. "Depleted" means "used up" or "consumed", and the text never suggests that the flowers in dense patches are sometimes used up or consumed.

Choice B. This is the best choice. The text after the colon tells us that bees will travel beyond dense flower patches that have "low species richness" to find different kinds of flowers. "Homogenous" means "of the same kind" or "alike", which fits this context perfectly.

Choice C. This doesn't fit the logic of the text. The text never suggests that bees are less attracted to immature plants than full grown plants.

Choice D. This contradicts the text. "Dispersed" means "spread out", which is the opposite of "dense". Flowers in dense patches can't also be spread out!

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Words in Context Test- 1 - Question 3

The following text is from Booth Tarkington's 1921 novel Alice Adams.

Mrs. Adams had always been fond of vases, she said, and every year her husband's Christmas present to her was a vase of one sort or another—whatever the clerk showed him, marked at about twelve or fourteen dollars.

As used in the text, what does the word "marked" most nearly mean?

Detailed Solution for Words in Context Test- 1 - Question 3

Choice A. This isn't the meaning of "marked" as used here. It wouldn't make sense to say that a vase was "stained at twelve or fourteen dollars".

Choice B. This isn't the meaning of "marked" as used here. It wouldn't make sense to say that a vase was "staged at twelve or fourteen dollars".

Choice C. This isn't the meaning of "marked" as used here. It wouldn't make sense to say that a vase was "watched at twelve or fourteen dollars".

Choice D. This is the best choice. The text suggests that Mrs. Adam's typical Christmas present from her husband was a vase that cost, or was "priced at", about twelve or fourteen dollars.

Words in Context Test- 1 - Question 4

Mineralogical differences are detectable in samples collected from two locations on the near-Earth asteroid Ryugu, but such differences may not indicate substantial compositional variations in the asteroid. Cosmochemist Kazuhide Nagashima and colleagues note that at the small scale of the samples, the distribution of minerals is unlikely to be ______.

Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word or phrase?

Detailed Solution for Words in Context Test- 1 - Question 4

Choice A. Redundant means "not or no longer useful or needed", which is too strong. The text doesn't suggest that the variation between the samples isn't a useful finding at all—just that we can't assume that the large-scale composition of the asteroid will show the same variation. But the composition of the samples might be useful for something else!

Choice B. Neglected means "suffering a lack of proper care" or "abandoned", which doesn't work here. The text never suggests that the distribution of minerals in the samples would be neglected, so this statement doesn't logically follow.

Choice C. This is the best choice. The text tells us that the samples are too "small scale" to reflect the composition of the asteroid, which probably doesn't show the same variation on a large scale. This suggests that the mineral composition of the samples are unlikely to be exactly the same from sample to sample.

Choice D. Ongoing means "still in progress", which doesn't make sense: the distribution of minerals in a sample can't be "ongoing".

Words in Context Test- 1 - Question 5

The following text is from F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel The Great Gatsby.

[Jay Gatsby] was balancing himself on the dashboard of his car with that resourcefulness of movement that is so peculiarly American—that comes, I suppose, with the absence of lifting work in youth and, even more, with the formless grace of our nervous, sporadic games. This quality was continually breaking through his punctilious manner in the shape of restlessness.

As used in the text, what does the word "quality" most nearly mean?

Detailed Solution for Words in Context Test- 1 - Question 5

Like many words, "quality" can mean different things in different contexts. It can be a noun that means something like "attribute", but it can also describe how good something is (e.g, "high quality" vs "low quality"). How is it being used here?

"This quality" is phrased in a way that refers back to something in the previous sentence. In particular, it seems to link to "that resourcefulness of movement...), which the previous sentence works hard to describe. That whole phrase, in turn, is being use to characterize the way is behaving.

So, "quality" is being used to describe an "attribute" of how Gatsby is behaving. (A), "characteristic", matches this use.

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