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)
Comical, farcical. The “children’s attempt at a Mother’s Day brunch”
went pretty badly—so badly that it actually made more work for Mom. What
a joke! Correct choices “comical” and “farcical” both mean laughable. The
brunch was not “satirical,” because it was not making fun of a preexisting
work of art, situation, etc. Although the brunch likely was “convivial” and
“amiable,” which both mean warm and good-humored, this pair doesn’t fit
with the idea of children creating a minor disaster while trying to do
something nice for their mother. “Labile,” which can mean unstable or
moody, is used to describe a person or a chemical reaction, not a brunch.
38.
An inscrutable, an unreadable. The language of the privacy policy “is
so abstruse that most consumers could not read it,” indicating that the privacy
policy must be hard to read, and indeed “abstruse” means difficult to
comprehend. The correct answers, “inscrutable” and “unreadable,” although
not perfect synonyms for each other, also both mean difficult to comprehend
or understand. “Decipherable” and “lucid,” meaning clear and
understandable, are the opposite of what the blank requires. “Sanctioned,”
which in this context means officially approved of, and “repetitive” are not
synonyms for “hard to read” and so cannot be correct.
39.
Pacific, conciliatory . The opening “Though” foreshadows a twist. The
sentence means that although the novel describes “the heroism and sacrifice
of the common soldier,” it is “profoundly _________,” where the blank is
something that would be unexpected in a novel about brave soldiers. The
sentence also says that the novel was banned because it “implicitly opposed,”
or was against, “their vision of armed conquest.” Therefore, it must have an
anti-armed conquest theme, something peaceful. “Pacific” and “conciliatory,”
which both mean anti-war, are the correct answers. “Prescient,” “clairvoyant,”
and “prophetic” all mean able to foresee the future, a trap related to the
Nazis’s “vision of armed conquest.” The sentence isn’t talking about a
supernatural vision, but rather about an overarching goal. It is true that
“prophetic” can also mean “characteristic of prophets,” and many prophets in
various religious traditions spoke out against what they saw as evil
governments. However, the interpretation of “prophetic” as “resisting evil
authority” is not what is found as even a secondary definition in standard
dictionaries. More importantly, even if you accepted this definition, there is
no synonymous or near-synonymous partner among the answer choices.
Sentence Equivalence questions require two answers that produce equivalent
sentences. Only “pacific” and “conciliatory” work.
40.