Manhattan Prep - 5 Lb. Book of Gre Practice Problems 1,800 Practice Problems in Book and Online (Manhattan Prep 5 lb Series (2019 Edition))-Manhattan Prep (2019)
Depict, mirror. The image of people with “small waists” is contrasted
with that of people in “overweight Western societies.” The word “not” before
the blank indicates that the blank should mean represent or portray. To
“mirror” means to “depict” or portray, and thus both correct answers are good
matches. “Distort” is a trap answer, because although an image can be
distorted, the sentence is not saying that modern people are distorted.
“Denigrate” and “defame” are both very strong words that mean to criticize or
disparage, but there is no criticism of modern people in this sentence, just a
comparison. “Deify,” which means to treat as godlike, neither has a match nor
fits the meaning of the sentence.
26.
Novel, fresh. The sentence says the commentator “parroted his
ideological compatriots,” people who think the same way that he does; his
commentary was the same as theirs. However, “anything but” reverses the
direction, so if his commentary was the same as someone else’s, it was
anything but “novel” or “fresh,” the correct answers. If something is
“tendentious,” it is intended to promote a particular viewpoint, so that is not
the right answer. Although “evenhanded” is tempting, it cannot be the correct
answer because it does not have a good match. “Derivative” and “hackneyed”
form an incorrect trap pair; both of these words mean imitative or unoriginal,
the opposite of what the blank requires.
27.
Putative, conjectural. The structure of the sentence indicates that the
blank opposes the word “proven”; it should be something like unproven or
not necessarily proven. The correct answers, “putative” (generally thought to
be) and “conjectural” (hypothetical, speculative) both match this meaning.
“Corroborated” and “irrefutable” are an incorrect pair of words that have
meanings similar to “proven.” “Incorrect” could also be seen as an opposite of
“proven,” but it does not have a match (and note that an unproven theory is
not necessarily wrong). “Irreconcilable,” which means incompatible or
conflicting, also cannot be correct because it neither has a match nor fits the
intended meaning.
28.