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)
Phlegmatic, dispassionate. The people who disliked the spy thought his
demeanor was “taciturn,” meaning reserved or uncommunicative, or
“brusque,” meaning abrupt or blunt. Because those descriptives are given
from the people who dislike the spy, look for words that describe those same
qualities in a more neutral, or even positive, manner. “Histrionic” and
“melodramatic” are a great pair, but, as is so often the case, they mean exactly
the opposite of what the blank needs: overly theatrical and exaggerated.
“Hirsute” is a tough word that actually means hairy, and there’s nothing to
suggest that the spy is feeling “melancholic,” or sad. That leaves just two
words. “Phlegmatic” means calm, cool, and collected, and “dispassionate”
means unemotional and composed; both are more positive versions of
“taciturn or brusque.”
97.
Melancholy, morose. The key to this sentence comes at the very end,
when the sentence says that Hamlet is not “paralyzed with depression,” or
generally depressed. “Indecisive” and “monologic” both fit the famous
character of Hamlet, but they don’t fit the sentence (nor do they make a pair).
Similarly, “violent” and “barbaric” would be accurate in describing someone
who committed a “killing spree,” but they don’t fit the blank. Only
“melancholy” and “morose” match the idea that he was depressed.
98.
Anomalous, aberrant. The word “once” signals a change in the direction
of meaning. As the sentence ends with the idea that the behaviors in question
“were once considered normal,” you need something for the blank that means
uncommon. “Mythical” and “fabulous” may seem to fit, but they’re too
extreme. “Anomalous” and “aberrant,” which both mean deviating from an
expected standard, fit. “Importunate,” meaning persistent, may rhyme with
“unfortunate,” but that’s about all they have in common.
99.